Wildlife which lives in the Great Dividing Range includes a variety of wallabies; euros; the Common wombat; possums such as the Ringtail possum, Brushtail possum, Leadbeaters possum, Mountain Pygmy possum, etc; gliders such as Sugar gliders, Feathertail gliders, Mahogany gliders, Squirrel gliders, yellow-bellied gliders and Greater gliders; parrots such as rainbow lorikeets and other lorikeets, sulphur crested cockatoos, black cockatoos, rosellas, galahs, corellas; Laughing kookaburras and blue-winged kookaburras; short-beaked echidnas; Eastern quolls; superb lyrebird; a variety of Bowerbirds; goannas; eastern water dragons; frill necked lizards; Eastern brown snakes; Copperheads; Red bellied black snakes. This is just a small selection of the many animals found in the Great Dividing Range, which extends from far North Queensland, down the eastern coast and into western Victoria.
The Spotted Catbird lives in the are of the Great Dividing Range
The Great Dividing Range is a huge mountain range that extends from Cape York Peninsula in the very north, right down the eastern coast of Australia and along the southern part of the continent, ending at the Grampians in western Victoria. Most of Australia's population lives along the east coast, so you could easily say that several million people live within and around the Great Dividing Range.
Yes. The Great Dividing Range is the name given to the mountain range that extends for 3500 kilometres from the tip of Cape York, right down the eastern seaboard and around to western Victoria. The brush-tailed phascogale is a species that lives right along this range, as well as pockets of northwestern and southwestern Australia.
lives were?
No wildlife lives on the Antarctic continent, interior or on the beaches.
The Eastern Wallaroo lives on the hillsides and rugged terrain of the Great Dividing Range, which runs right down the eastern coast of Australia and ends in western Victoria. It lives among the eucalyptus bushland of these areas. It is not endangered: its conservation status is "least concern'.
yeti
The brush-tailed rock wallaby lives in areas with plenty of rocky escarpments, outcrops and cliffs in a range extending from south-east Queensland, along the Great Dividing Range, down through New South Wales and Victoria to the Grampians in western Victoria.
snakes
yes. It lives and it is wild
Positively
The marsupial mouse (also known as the brown antechinus(Antechinus stuartii) lives east of the Great Dividing Range in Australia. It is mostly found in forested habitats.