Tasmania, Australia's island state, does not have an official faunal or avian emblem. The Tasmanian Devil is the state's unofficial faunal emblem, and the Thylacine (also known as the Tasmanian Tiger) may also be regarded as an unofficial emblem.
The Yellow Wattlebird, which is only found in Tasmania, is considered the unofficial avian (bird) emblem.
The New South Wales floral emblem is the waratah(Telopea speciosissima).The faunal emblems are the platypus and the kookaburra.
Queensland's floral emblem is the Cooktown Orchid.Queensland's faunal emblems are:Animal (Faunal): KoalaBird (Avian): Brolga
the national faunal emblem of the U.S. is the bald eagle.
South Australia's faunal emblems are the hairy-nosed wombat and the piping shrike.
Queensland's faunal, or animal, emblems are: Animal (Faunal): Koala Bird (Avian): Brolga Aquatic: Barrier Reef Anemone Fish
South Australia has the hairy-nosed wombat as one of its faunal emblems.
Mandurah is in Western Australia, and therefore has the same faunal emblems as the rest of Western Australia - the numbat and the black swan.
Australia does not have an official national faunal emblem. The kangaroo and emu are on Australia's coat of arms, but they are not the official national animal emblems.
The Tasmanian devil is not an emblem. Tasmania has no official faunal emblems.
The koala was officially named the faunal emblem of Queensland in 1971. The brolga was officially named the avian emblem of Queensland in January 1986.
The floral emblem for Victoria is the Common Heath, sometimes referred to as Pink Heath.The faunal emblems are Leadbeaters Possum (animal) and the Helmeted Honeyeater (bird).
The faunal emblems of South Australia are the hairy nosed wombat for the mammal, the piping shrike for the bird or avian emblem, and the leafy sea dragon for the marine emblem.