The cane toad. Rabbits have eroded and de-nuded large areas of Australia. Foxes also kill the native fauna. Starlings and Indian Mynahs displace the native birds.
Yes. Both the rabbit and the fox have been introduced to Australia, and both have caused massive damage since their arrival.
No. Carp are not native to Australia. They have been introduced, and have caused untold damage to Australian waterways.
The brush-tailed possum, a pouched mammal (marsupial) of Australia, was introduced into New Zealand, where it has caused considerable damage to native forests.
The brush-tailed possum, a pouched mammal (marsupial) of Australia, was introduced into New Zealand, where it has caused considerable damage to native forests.
Rabbits are not indigenous to Australia. They have been introduced to the continent, and have caused untold ecological damage since they were let loose in Victoria in the 1850s.
They are. Rabbits are found throughout Australia. They have adapted very well to the country, and have caused considerable damage to the environment.
The cattle egret was introduced to Australia in the 1930s. These birds eat flies, fleas, and grasshoppers. It will even remove fleas and ticks from hides, right off animals. These birds have been successful as an introduced species and have caused little to no harm.
There are two answers. The rabbit is the main problem, as it eats the vegetation which is the food source for native animals. The fox is also a major problem for Australia's native animals, though it does not cause the same damage as rabbits do to native plants.
Animals must maintain a stable environment because if they do not and there are to many changes in the body. Diseases are caused and they animal may die.Because if this balacne is lost the animal can't survive very long.
more and more recently around us, with the worse of environment.
the caused by the environment is by the smoke around the earth
Myxomatosis (sometimes shortened to "myxi" or "myxo") is a disease which affects rabbits. It is caused by the Myxoma virus. First observed in Uruguay in the late 1800s. It was introduced illegally to Egypt in 1842 and as a result spread to the rest of Africa. It was deliberately introduced into Australia in 1950 in an attempt to control rabbit infestation and population there; see rabbits in Australia. It was also deliberately introduced in the UK to try and reduce the rabbit population after World War II.