Wallace Line
Yes, a kookaburra is an Australian bird. The Laughing kookaburra and the Blue-winged kookaburra are the two species native to Australia. Other species of Kookaburras are also native to New Guinea and the Aru Islands, in southeastern Indonesia.
The kingfisher is indeed an Australian animal, or rather, bird. There are many species of kingfisher in Australia, including the kookaburra.
Karri is not an Australian animal.Karri is a species of eucalyptus tree (Eucalyptus diversicolor) found in far southwest western Australia.
There are lots of frogs in various parts of the world. Australian has 230 species of frogs and there are around 5,280 species of frog world wide.
It just basically means that, that animal is from that region. Such as the Komodo dragon is native of Indonesia. It originated there. In complete laymens terms the species began there.
Definitely no. Indonesia is tropical, there will be no subtropical animal, so polar animal definitely cannot live in Indonesia. Indonesia temperature all the year is between 25 - 36 degC.
None of these is an Australian animal.The answer is supposed to be "wallaby", but the species name is wrong. It is a yellow-footed rock wallaby, not a yellow-tail.It is certainly not koala or platypus, as there is only one species of each of these.
A bottlenose dolphin is a Australian animal.
There is no species specifically known as the Western Australian wallaroo. "Macropus robustus" is the scientific name for the Euro, also known as the Common Wallaroo, Eastern Wallaroo and Barrow Island Euro. This animal ranges over most of the Australian continent, including the west. There are several subspecies of this animal.
Indonesia has two national animals, the Garuda and the Komodo Dragon.
Australian Animal Health Laboratory was created in 1985.
mining and animal care