America
In their native state, sugar gliders live in Australia.
Sugar gliders do not live in large social colonies, but they do tend to live in extended family groups.
they live in cars
No, not in the wild. Sugar gliders are native to Australia.
Sugar gliders are not endangered, but they are protected in their native country of Australia.
Sugar gliders generally live in family groups of about 6-8. Such a group is known as a colony.
Sometimes. While sugar gliders live in the Tasmanian devil's environment, the Tasmanian devil does not live in the sugar glider's environment outside of Tasmania.
Yes. Wild sugar gliders do live in Fitzroy Falls National Park.
Sugar gliders are not native to the US, but some have been either accidentally or deliberately released into the wild. Sugar gliders are found in Australia (including its island state of Tasmania), Indonesia, and Papua-New Guinea. They were originally native to Australia, but easily spread to other northern islands.
No. (Not naturally, at least.)
Animals which live in eastern Australia include:bandicootsEastern grey kangaroosWestern grey kangaroosspotted tailed quolls and eastern quollsTasmanian devils (Tasmania only)brush-tailed possumsringtail possumsgliders such as sugar gliders, mahogany gliders, greater gliders, feathertail gliders, yellow-bellied gliders and squirrel glidersplatypusesechidnasmany species of wallabies
The rainforest is one of the habitats in which sugar gliders live. They live in tree hollows in bushland and the rainforests of Australia. Climatic conditions preferred by sugar gliders include rainforests and bushland (both wet and dry sclerophyll forest). They can adapt to cool-temperate climates, such as that found in Tasmania, and warmer, humid climates of northern Australia, but they are healthiest in drier bushland rather than moist rainforest.