Badgers are found in Europe, western North America and South Asia.
They are not found in Australia; nor have they been introduced to Australia.
No. There are no badgers of any kind in Australia. Many Australians do not even know what a badger looks like.
No. There are no badgers of any kind in Australia. Many Australians do not even know what a badger looks like.
No. Wombats are never called badgers. They look completely different, and there are no badgers in Australia.
Most of Germany's native animals are not found in Australia. Alpine ibex, badgers, chamois, hamsters, hedgehogs, marmots, shrews, raccoons, squirrels, martens and the dormouse are not found anywhere in Australia.
Badgers recognize other badgers by their scent and by checking their passports and any other forms of iD
Only humans
any animal can
Honey badgers are not native to the US. They are native to Africa, the Middle East, and India.
There are Eurasian badgers, hog badgers, American badgers, ferret badgers, honey badgers, and stink badgers. I'm guessing that your question was, "What kinds of badgers are there?"
Define what you mean by ivory.
coyotes eat badgers
yes, badgers are mammals