The now demonetised New Zealand 5 cent coin featured the "Tuatara", the last surviving member of an otherwise extinct family of reptiles indigenous to New Zealand.
Such a coin does not exist. The Tuatara was featured on the reverse of the New Zealand 5 cent coin which was withdrawn from circulation and demonetised in 2006.
New Zealand being a member of the Commonwealth, has Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse of all coins since 1953. The reverse of the now demonetised New Zealand 5 cent coin featured the "Tuatara", the last surviving member of an otherwise extinct family of reptiles indigenous to New Zealand.
In New Zealand It is a Tuatara, but they have recently abolished the five cent coin.
New Zealand * Added - The tuatara, also called the sphenodon, still lives in New Zealand.
New zealand
The Tuatara has three eyes and it lives in New Zealand
No. The Tuatara is found only in New Zealand.
No. Outside of zoos the tuatara can only be found in New Zealand.
New Zealand
They are an endemic species of New Zealand.
tuatara
The animal on the New Zealand 20 cent coin is the tuatara, which is a reptile native to New Zealand. It is a unique species that is closely related to reptiles such as lizards and snakes, but is considered a distinct group in its own right. The tuatara is an important cultural symbol for the Maori people of New Zealand, and it is also considered a national treasure due to its rarity and the fact that it is found nowhere else in the world. The animal on the New Zealand 20 cent coin is the tuatara, which is a reptile native to New Zealand. It is a unique species that is closely related to reptiles such as lizards and snakes, but is considered a distinct group in its own right. The tuatara is an important cultural symbol for the Maori people of New Zealand, and it is also considered a national treasure due to its rarity and the fact that it is found nowhere else in the