No, Dingo's are endemic to the continent of Australia
Australia.
The dingo is a free-roaming wild dog unique to the continent of Australia
in 1982, some taxonomists recommended it to be classified as a subspecies of the wolf :)
Asia is a continent. I do not see how you could possibly identify yourself as a continent.
a shotgun
The only enemy of the dingo is people. Being at the top of the food chain, healthy adult dingoes do not have any other natural predators. Man could be considered an enemy of the dingo.
Domestic dogs are those that have been socialized to interact with humans - they are "domesticated." Dingoes are wild dogs found on the Australian continent and, like the North American wolves, cannot be tamed.
It isn't. The dingo is not the faunal emblem of any territory or state in Australia. The faunal emblem of the Australian Capital Territory is the gang gang cockatoo.Although commonly considered Australia's native dog, the dingo is not truly native to the continent, having been brought by the Aborigines about 4000 years ago.
As tall... wait for it... as ur faces mom...
The Red kangaroo has no natural predators apart from the dingo, a relative newcomer to the continent. Only a very hungry dingo might take on an adult kangaroo, but joeys are commonly subject to predation from dingoes and eagles.
It is unlikely, but not impossible. Dingoes are larger and therefore stronger; however, a Tasmanian devil has stronger jaws, and could deliver a fatal bite if it could reach a dingo's jugular.