Yes. Wombats are solitary creatures, living alone in burrows they dig. While many wombats will live in proximity to each other, in wombat colonies, they do not depend on each other like some animal family groups do.
No. Wombats are solitary animals, living alone for their adult life.
No. Wombats do not live in the rainforest. They live in grasslands and bushland.
Baby wombats live in their mother's pouch. Wombats are marsupials.
No. Wombats are not related to rats at all. Wombats are not rodents, but marsupials.
No, there are no wombats in Africa. Wombats are native to Australia alone.
Wombats live in the wild on the continent of Australia.
No animal from the rainforest eats wombats, as wombats do not live in the rainforest.
They don't. Wombats are terrestrial-dwelling marsupials. They are not members of the bat family.
All three species of wombats are native to Australia.
No. Wombats are not found at Uluru. The area is too dry, and there is insufficient vegetation of the sort preferred by wombats.
Wombats are in the vombatidae family
Wombats do not live in Montana but live in Australia, in the states of Queensland, Tasmania, South Australia, Victoria and NSW.
No. Wombats are endemic to Australia, meaning they are not found anywhere else.