Tasmania is an island and a State of Australia. Australia has a parliamentary system.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is the current head of the Commonwealth government .
Tasmania has a state government. After a recent election with no clear winner, two of the main opposing parties, the Labor party and the Greens; formed a coalition.
Tasmania does not have any official state mammal. The Tasmanian devil is the unofficial state mammal of Tasmania.
Tasmania belongs to Australia. It is one of Australia's states.
They had a unified government.
American government
Tasmania is one of the states of Australia. It is governed by the Federal government of Australia, but like all the states of Australia, it has its own state government as well.
they are a commonwealth goverment
Tasmania has a state government. After a recent election with no clear winner, two of the main opposing parties, the Labor party and the Greens; formed a coalition.
It is a island
It is a island
Tasmania is a state of Australia, so it has the same Prime Minister as the rest of Australia. The state government of Tasmania, like the other states of Australia, is led by the Premier.
King Island is located in Bass Strait between Victoria and Tasmania. For the purposes of government, it is a part of Tasmania and is therefore a part of Australia.
No. They are a big pest and eat all the native animals. There are almost no foxes left in Tasmania any more. The government has programs to wipe them out completely in the state.
Tasmanian Tigers are extinct. They did live in temperate regions of Tasmania. They were eradicated from Tasmania by hunting, with bounties placed on them by the government until 1909. The last known animal died in captivity in 1936. The DPIW site of the Tasmania government provides reliable information.
According to the Australian Government's Geoscience Australia website, Tasmania takes up just 0.9% of Australia's total land area. See the related link below.
There is only one species of platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) so the kind you find in Eastern Australia and Tasmania is the same one you find everywhere else that it lives. (Of course Eastern Australia and Tasmania is about the only place you will find the platypus in the wild - and note that Tasmania is actually part of Australia.)
No, it is cold in Tasmania. Tasmania is in the Southern Hemisphere.