Although Australia has a feral camel problem, to the point where there are almost one million camels on the mainland, it does not mean one will automatically come across camels when wandering through the outback. Currently, there are approximately three camels per ten square kilometres in Western Australia.
in deserts worldwide, except in australia
Yes they do The ones from India could, but not the people we also call Native Americans.
Yes. Australia is the only country that has wild camels. The Arab traders brought them over to help transport luggage and goods, and they just started to breed, and now there is a large number of wild camels, mostly in central Australia.
They live in the waters of Southern Australia to Western Australia.
No camels live in in the Painted Desert today. However, a now-extinct genus of camels once roamed across the Western U.S, including the Painted Desert.
Western Australia.
if you live in western Australia up your bum
Gosnells in Western Australia
You can not tell because there is no exact number all can be different so there is not really an answer
Most of Australia's quokkas live on Rottnest Island, off the coast of Western Australia, near Perth.
Dromedary camels live in North Western India and the lowlands of Afghanistan. Some dromedary camels live in the outside parts of the Arabian peninsula and Sonila to the south and westwood across African deserts. A large amount of Dromedary camels also live in an African desert called the Sahara desert, which is the largest desert in the world.
Mullewa,Western Australia