No. Quolls are not found in the desert. They require bushland, either wet sclerophyll or dry sclerophyll bushland, we some live in rainforest.
No. Spotted tailed quolls, also known as tiger quolls, are found only in Australia.
Quolls can live near wetlands, but not in wetlands,, as they are found in wet and dry sclerophyll forest (eucalyptus bushland).
Not at all. Quolls are arboreal (tree-dwelling) marsupials, as they are nimble climbers.
Tiger quolls are solitary, living alone. However, their territory overlaps with that of other tiger quolls, and where there are numerous quolls in proximity to each other, it is known as a colony.
No. Quolls are native to Australia and New Guinea. Texas is in North America.
No. Spotted tailed quolls, like all quolls, are marsupials. They are born live, though very undeveloped. Only the platypus and echidna, which are monotremes, come from eggs.
There is no collective term for a group of spotted tailed quolls. Where a community of quolls live in relative proximity to each other, it may be called a colony.
No. Northern quolls tend to be solitary, although less so than the other three species of quoll in Australia.
Quolls of any variety are opportunistic carnivores. This means they not only hunt live prey, but also scavenge, or forage, for carrion.
Yes. The tiger quolls, also known as the spotted tailed quoll, is an Australian marsupial. The largest of the quolls in Australia, it is mostly found in Tasmania, and some locations along the eastern seaboard of the mainland, through Queensland, Victoria and New South Wales. Spotted tailed quolls, or Tiger quolls live in most types of forest, from bushland to rainforest, as long as there is plenty of ground cover. They also live in thick coastal heathlands along the eastern coast of Australia.
No. Quolls do not hibernate. The only Australian marsupial which undergoes any period of hibernation is the Mountain Pygmy possum.
No. Quolls do not die after mating.