Want this question answered?
Yes. Wombats were a source of food for the Aborigines.
Wombats are native to the country and continent of Australia. This is the only country in which they are found in the wild.
Yes. Wombats were favoured food as they were slow and easily captured, and they had plenty of meat.
All three species of wombats are native to Australia.
Apart from human intrusion into their environment, their only natural predator is the dingo, but introduced species like dogs, cats and foxes can also hunt them for food. Aborigines also hunted wombats for food.
Aborigines used wombats primarily for food. Their hair and hide would also be used: hair was woven into string and string bags, which would be used for fishing nets, tying tool parts together (e.g. tying a spearhead to a spear) and decoration, while the hide could be used for carry bags or, in cooler areas, clothing.
THEY ARE FUND ONLY IN AUSTRALIA.
Um...Australia?
Wombats are native to the country of Australia.
Wombats have few natural predators. The wombat's main predator is the dingo, but introduced species like dogs, cats and foxes can also hunt them for food. Young wombats which are still vulnerable and only just emerging from the pouch may be taken by birds of prey such as wedge-tailed eagles. In Tasmania, Australia's southern state, Tasmanian devils will prey on smaller wombats, and they have been known to feed off the carcass of a wombat. Aborigines also hunted wombats for food.
Wombats do not live in Montana but live in Australia, in the states of Queensland, Tasmania, South Australia, Victoria and NSW.
Common wombats are found only in Australia.