Yes. Australia is the only country that has wild camels. The Arab traders brought them over to help transport luggage and goods, and they just started to breed, and now there is a large number of wild camels, mostly in central Australia.
Yes there are many Camels in the Simpson Desert. Camels are not native to Australia, but they were brought over in the first half of the 1800s, to carry goods across Australia where horses and drays simply could not cope. Afghan cameleers trod many a path across the deserts of Australia, and naturally, camels escaped from time to time. Australia actually has the world's largest feral camel population, and there are estimated to be half a million wild camels in Western Australia alone.
No, the camel is not native to Australia. They have been introduced, and are now in plague proportions in the outback.
Whilst actual figures are not known, it is estimated that there are between 500,000 and 1,000,000 feral camels in Australia's outback.
Yes, there are wild camels that live in Australia. They are referred to as Australian feral camels and are a combination of Bactrian and dromedary camels.
because they are there before
Camels are found both in Africa and Asia.
No, there were only camels in Africa and Egypt
no
it was by camels
Deserts in Africa and Central Asia. In Africa you get dromedary camels with one hump, in Asia you get bactrian camels with two humps.
No. They live in the deserts of Africa.
Actually i think it is Africa The country with most camels in the world is definitely Somalia with more than 6 million camels
Egypt is in Africa and it has camels there! yay!
Buffalos, chickens, butterflies, and camels.
in Africa they are in most deserts
Egypt.
The camels were introduced in 300C.E, and there for desert travel.