Almost all Australian animals do not hibernate. Only one Australian mammal species hibernates: the mountain pygmy possum, which lives in the Snowy Mountains and the alpine regions of Australia.
they hibernate.
They do not migrate or hibernate.
No. Numbats do not migrate. No native Australian marsupials migrate. Some species are semi-nomadic, but the numbat is not.
they do not hibernate because they are birds and birds do not hibernate but the bald eagle does migrate
Whale migrate they do not and cannot hibernate.
No, lions do not migrate nor do they hibernate.
Wallabies neither hibernate nor migrate.
No, the Clownfish does not hibernate nor does it migrate.
bobcats do not hibernate or migrate they are active all year round
Hibernate
they migrate because if they hibernate they would sleep in for the winter
Platypuses neither hibernate nor migrate. They are active throughout the year, and they tend to stay by their home pond, creek or river as long as there is sufficient food and water. No Australian native animals migrate (though some are nomadic), and only the mountain pygmy possums of Australia's alpine regions hibernate.