Bandicoots are native to the continent of Australia.
The Quenda is another name for the Southern Brown Bandicoot, a marsupial native to Australia.
Australia's largest bandicoot is the Northern Brown Bandicoot. Its head-body length can be as long as 47 cm, which is about 2cm longer than its nearest rival, the long-nosed bandicoot. The Northern Brown Bandicoot weighs up to 3kg, which is more than twice the weight of any other species of bandicoot.
Goats are not native to Australia, neither are camels, rabbits, pigs, sheep etc.
This description fits the bandicoot, a small, burrowing native animal of Australia.
Dingoes are wild dogs that live in many parts of Australia. An accurate count is difficult, as many feral domestic dogs live in the same areas and interbreed with the dingoes. Dingoes are listed as vulnerable, but not endangered. However, some estimates say there are only a few hundred pure dingoes left, while others say there are tens of thousands of them.
The long-nosed bandicoot (Perameles nasuta) is a species of bandicoot found in Australia and is the largest member of its genus,
True bandicoots are found only in Australia, but they are named after the unrelated Bandicoot-rat (not a marsupial) found in parts of Asia.
Bandicoots are a group of small to medium sized marsupial omnivores found in northern Australia and New Guinea where they live in rainforests. The desert bandicoot is an extinct bandicoot of the arid country in the center of Australia.
The bilby and the bandicoot are both Australian pouched mammals. The bilby is actually a member of the bandicoot family.
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bandicoiot