correction to above answer. Australia has no native cats but it does have a serious problem with FERAL cats,theses are domestic cats that have gone wild,these cats get quite large,do lots of damage and are a pest
No. Australia has no large cats; nor has it any native wild cats.The quoll, a cat-sized carnivorous marsupial, is sometimes referred to as a native cat, but it is not even remotely related to the feline family.
Australia has no wild cats.
Most wild cats are found all over the world, mostly on the continents of Europe, Africa and Asia.
Impossible! There are no wild cats in Australia although they do have some cat-like marsupials,
NO large cats live in Australia, maybe some feral house cats. But no large cats. Note: The now-extinxt Tasmanian tiger (Thylacine) was not a tiger, but a marsupial.
Wild cats are found on all continents except Antarctica and Australia. However, Australia does have some cat-like marsupials.
Wolves and wild large cats.
Problably 7.
Wild cats, pet cats, wild dogs, and pet dogs. Large fish prey on frogs, too.
Not any type of wild cats can be owned just feline friends like house cats and other cats that you have as a pet
There are no large wild cats in any part of Ireland outside of zoos.
There are 3 main Wild Cats in Canada, the smallest is the Bobcat, next is the Lynx and the Largest is the Cougar.
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.