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Olga mulga (Australian)
Mulga is a plant specially adapted to desert conditions, and its seeds are eaten by the mulga parrot. The chisel-toothed kangaroo rat eats the salty leaves of the saltbush, which also contain the water they need. The spinifex hopping mouse eats the roots and seeds of desert grasses such as spinifex. The white plumed honey-eater eats the nectar of the Sturt's Desert Pea, enabling pollination to occur.
Tropical rain forest, temperate rain forest, savannah, mulga, scrub, plantation species, desert,
The mulga parrot
Authentic Australian boomerangs are typically made of roots from mulga or black wattle trees. The tree roots are already shaped in the form of a boomerang making them very durable.
Some plants found in Gibson Desert are mulgas, mixed shrubs, triodia, desert bloodwood, and porcupine grass. While mulga is a shrub, desert bloodwood is a tree. Triodia is a type of grass. Gibson Desert is situated in Western Australia which has an area of 60,232 square miles.
Mulga Bill's Bicycle was created in 1896.
Mulga Bill's bicycle was written by A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson.
There are about 60 different species of kangaroo in Australia, and they each have unique adaptations for different climates. Different species can live in all parts of Australia. Kangaroos live in a variety of climates ranging from sub-Alpine to savanna grassland to temperate bushland and coastal heath. Some varieties of kangaroos seem to enjoy swimming, whilst others are just as happy in the dry mulga scrub. Tree kangaroos live in tropical rainforest climates. Many larger species of kangaroos such as the red kangaroo, commonly said to live in the desert, cannot survive in the sandy desert at all. There is insufficient food or water for them to survive. However, they can certainly live in semi-arid areas where there are permanent waterholes, and where the vegetation is soft and juicy enough for them to eat.
A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson's Mulga Bill's Bicycle is known as a bush ballad.
Mulga Bill's Bicycle was written in 1896 by Andrew Barton (Banjo) Patterson.
Yes. An example is when Mulga Bill calls the bicycle a two-wheeled outlaw.