No. Platypuses live throughout eastern coastal Australia and its island state of Tasmania, particularly within heavily wooded and protected regions. They are found from the cooler sub-alpine areas in the south, such as Victoria and the Tasmanian highlands, north through New South Wales to tropical far north Queensland. Platypuses live in bushland as well as tropical, sub-tropical and temperate rainforests. Its distribution is not considered to be in the outback.
the waratah and platypus is the nsw state emblem
platypus
The platypus was selected as the New South Wales state faunal emblem in 1971.
Well, honey, the platypus was chosen as the New South Wales state emblem because it's a unique little critter with a mix of mammal, bird, and reptile characteristics - just like a genetic potluck. Plus, it's native to the region, so they thought, "Hey, why not give this quirky fella some recognition?" And there you have it, the platypus strutting its stuff as the emblem of NSW.
why do you live
they live in nsw
No. The platypus is a solitary animal.
No. The platypus does not live in India. It is found only in Australia, specifically, the eastern half of the continent.
NSW
The platypus is a solitary animal. It does not live in social groups.
No. The platypus does not live or move in packs. It is a solitary animal.
Yes, because dogs live about 15 years while platypus live only about 10.