Tasmanian Devils are native to the continent of Australia.
They are no longer found on the mainland, though fossil evidence indicates that they did live on the main continent prior to the introduction of the dingo. Tasmanian devils are now found only on Australia's island state of Tasmania, which lies to the south of the mainland.
Yes. There are still Tasmanian devils in the wild.
Yes. Tasmanian devils were once found over much of the Australian continent. Now, they a only found in the wild on the southern island state of Tasmania, which is indeed a part of Australia.
No. Cats are not related to tasmanian devils. Cats are placental mammals and Tasmanian devils are marsupials. There are no true native cats in Australia.
No. The Tasmanian Devil is a carnivorous marsupial mammal that is native to Tasmania, the island state of Australia located off the southeast coast of the continent.
The Tasmanian devil is found only on the continent of Australia.
No. Mongooses and Tasmanian devils do not occupy the same continent.
The Tasmanian Devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) is a carnivorous marsupial mammal that is native to Tasmania. It was once widespread on the Australian mainland, but the arrival of the Dingo and possibly climate change at the end of the last ice age, may have contributed to its extinction on the mainland.
No. The Tasmanian Devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) is a carnivorous marsupial mammal that is native to Tasmania, the island state of Australia located off the southeast coast of the continent.
No. Tasmanian devils are native to Australia. Where they were once found on the mainland, their native habitat is only the Australian island state of Tasmania.
Tasmanian devils are found only on the continent of Australia. Though once common through the mainland, they are now found only in Australia's southern island state.
Yes. Tasmanian devils are native to Tasmania, the island state of Australia located off the southeast coast of the continent. Tasmanian devils were once prevalent on the Australian mainland, but it is thought that either climate change or the introduction of the Dingo by the Australian Aborigines caused its extinction on the mainland because of the increased competition for food. Currently, the only Tasmanian devils on the mainland are held in special reserves, or in captive breeding programmes.
Like all native Australian animals, adult Tasmanian devils drink water. Joeys drink mothers' milk.