Over 1,500 new species have been found in Australian waters in the past 10 years.
3,274,967 species of invertebres have been found
There is no such thing as an Australian introduced species in the Murray River. If it is Australian, it is not introduced. Species which have been introduced from overseas include various species of Carp, Brown and Rainbow trout, Redfin perch and Gambusia. The most prolific of these is the carp.
The Tasmanian devil is not introduced. It is endemic to Tasmania, the Australian state in which it is found. It has not been introduced to anywhere else, although it is found in zoos and animal sanctuaries on the mainland.
It has been found in tropical waters of the atlantic,indian and pacific ocean.
The Great White is in all waters on the planet, it has been found nearly everywhere.
Glass sponges generally live at water depths ranging from 1480 to 3000 ft. (450 to 900 meters).However, there is one species of glass sponge Oopsacas Minuta which has been found at much shallower depths, and there have been other glass sponge species which have been found at much deeper depths.
Australian upset they have lost there homes and family have been split appart 20 people have been found dead and 7 still remain missing several found ill.
No actual unicorns, though there are narwhals. Narwhals are a kind of whale found in far northern waters. The males of this species have tusks that resemble the legendary horn of a unicorn and may have been the inspiration for the myth.
The Australian Regent Skipper butterfly (Euschemon raffl esia) is unique in that it has a frenulum like a moth, which suggests that this butterfly might have been one of the earliest to evolve. Their diet varies from species to species but generally it is made up of the leaves of the host plant. For example, and Asian species lives on the leaves of the banana tree. A species found in America lives off the leaves of the Yucca tree so i would assume that the Australian Regent Skipper would live off the leaves of an Australian plant or tree, like the Eucalyptus, or something like that
Eucalypt refers to a species of tree common in Australia. They are known as "gum trees", and are the favoured food species for the native Australian marsupial, the koala.
Sharks are not typically found in Hudson Bay as it is a cold, subarctic body of water with temperatures that are generally too low for most shark species. Sharks are more commonly found in warmer, saltwater environments. However, some shark species, such as the Greenland shark, have been known to venture into colder waters, including the Arctic regions near Hudson Bay.
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