Here are just a few of the animals that live in New South Wales.
Australian Brush Turkey, Australian Magpies, Bandicoots, Bowerbirds, Brush Tailed Possum, Dingoes, Echidnas, Emus, Flying Foxes, Frogs, Gliding possums, Glossy Black Cockatoos, Ibis, Kangaroos & Wallabies, Koala, Laughing Kookaburra, Little penguin, Lord Howe Island Woodhen, Lyrebirds, Malleefowl, Parrots, Platypuse, Purple Copper Butterflies, Shearwaters, Snakes, Terns, Wedge Tailed Eagle and Wombats.
A small selection of native Australian animals which can be found in New South Wales include:
There are over 1000 native species and/or communities which are listed as endangered or vulnerable in New South Wales, Australia. Not all of these are animals. Below is just a small selection of endangered land animals. It does not include the endangered birds, reptiles, marine mammals, fish, amphibians and invertebrates.
See the related link for profiles of each of these mammals, plus more details on other endangered or vulnerable creatures.
Eastern Rosellas are not endangered. They are listed as "secure", both Federally and in the state of New South Wales, where their distribution is most widespread.
The abbreviation for New South Wales is NSW.
No. New South Wales is a state in Australia.
New South Wales was created in 1788.
Queensland
New South Wales is not a country. New South Wales is a state in the country of Australia.
New South Wales is a state in Australia, originally named by Lieutenant James Cook as it reminded him of southern Wales. The entire eastern coast of Australia was given this name, but now New South Wales refers to just one of the states in the eastern half of the continent. The capital city of New South Wales is Sydney.
New South Wales is one of the states of Australia.
No. New South Wales is a state of Australia, not a suburb.
New South Wales is on Australia's eastern coast.
New South Wales is located in Australia.
The slogan of New South Wales is "First State".