no
Maybe in a zoo or private Collection. Tigers of any colour aren't native to Australia.
The only white tigers in Australia are ones in zoos. Australia has no native felids at all, and tigers are found only in Asia. White tigers are individuals of the Bengal tiger subspecies that have a genetic condition called leucism. They are not Siberian tigers, not albino, and not a unique species or subspecies - these are all common mistakes people make regarding them. In the wild, they rarely occur as leucism is passed on by recessive genes, and a white animal sticks out like a sore thumb, but when they do it is obviously in the areas that Bengal tigers live, such as India, Bangladesh and Nepal. They are much more common in captivity because people have bred them on purpose - often through inbreeding, meaning many captive white tigers have genetic defects.
There are no tigers - snow, or otherwise - in Australia.
white tigers
Because they are white.
Yes. White tigers have a mutation in their genes that makes them white, and they are the offspring of siberian tigers and bengal tigers.
There are no tigers in Australia (except in zoos), so it is unlikely a tiger and a kangaroo will ever meet.
White Bengal tigers are the ONLY white tiger, white Siberian tigers do not exist. People just mistake white Bengals for siberians.
White Indian Tigers
white tigers
White tigers are merely white Bengal tigers, and are found in India.