Wombats are found in only one country, and that is Australia. They are found in the states of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania.
There are three species of wombats. Common wombats and Southern Hairy Nosed wombats are found in grasslands and bushland, on both flat land and hilly terrain. The biome of the Northern Hairy Nosed wombat is the sparser bushland / outback of Australia, where they feed on native grasses.
Wombats are not found in Asia. They are native to Australia alone.
Common wombats are not found to any great extent in Queensland. Queensland forms a very small part of its range. The common wombat is found more across the range of eastern New South Wales and through the eastern and southern parts of Victoria and South Australia.
No. Wombats are not found at Uluru. The area is too dry, and there is insufficient vegetation of the sort preferred by wombats.
No. Wombats are endemic to Australia, meaning they are not found anywhere else.
Yes. Australia is the only continent where platypuses and wombats are found in the wild. There is one species of platypus, which is found in the eastern half of the continent, and three different species of wombats, which are found in the east and south.
No. Wombats are not classified as rainforest animals. They are found in dry bushland and grasslands, where they can dig easily in the earth to create their burrows. The native grasses that wombats eat are not found in rainforests.
There are small populations of wombats in Western Australia, but they are restricted to the south-western corner of the state.
Wombats are native to the country and continent of Australia. This is the only country in which they are found in the wild.
No. Wombats are not found in New Zealand at all. Wombats are endemic to Australia.
Yes. There are common wombats in some of the bushland refuge areas in and around Brisbane, but they are rarely seen.
Some animals that are found in a dry sclerophyll forest are common wombats, magpies, kookaburras, bandicoots, shingle back lizard and brush tail possum.