No rabbit of any kind is native to Australia.
Jacarandas start to bloom October in Pretoria.
There are no native species of any cat that live in Australia naturally.
You can't. There are no true native tortoises of any kind in Australia.
Yes, Jacarandas are deciduous but the time when they drop their leaves depends on your location. If you live in an area where winter and spring are dry, they will behave as a regular deciduous tree. In areas with wet winters, such as California or southern Australia, they will only drop their leaves when rainfall reduces in the spring.
Yes. Platypuses are native to Australia, specifically the eastern half. They are endemic, meaning they are not found in any other country.
No. Cats are not native to Australia. It is believed that they first arrived with some of the Asian and Macassan traders who sought sea slugs (trepang) off the northern coast of Australia, about 500 years ago.
Australia does not have an official "native bird" or avian faunal symbol. The closest any bird comes to this is the emu, which is on the Australian coat of Arms.
No. Cheetahs are not native to Australia.
No. Goldfish are not native to Australia.
There are no Earthworms native to Western Australia. However, the Giant Gippsland Earthworm is native to Victoria, Australia. Australia has some 1,000 native species of earthworm so it is relatively impossible where most of them were originally native too.Correction:An estimated 90% of the earthworm species in the Kimberley region of Western Australia are endemic to this region alone, particuarly within the small patches of rainforest.
No. Chipmunks are not native to Australia; nor have they been introduced to any of the states, and that includes Tasmania.