Color-in Pages

This is one of three Australian Wildlife Colour-in Safaris. Please feel free to download the pages from this site. Download now, FREE! 

Koala. A highly specialised marsupial, restricted to a diet of leaves of certain eucalyptus trees. Seldom drinks. Once common in eastern Australia, is now completely protected. Koala youngsters spend their first few months in a pouch, but soon emerge fully furred, and cling to their mother’s back as she clambers about.

Kookaburra. This large bird laughs at the dawn. Groups of about six to twelve birds are common. The flocks usually comprise a small family. It’s a popular bird who will take morsels of food from your hand to complement its diet of small animals and insects.

Pygmy Possum. Possums come in all shapes and sizes, from Ringtails to Brushtails, Feathertails and Gliders. After sunset, the Pygmy Possum, the tiniest member of the possum family, awakes, and after a time spent grooming, begins to forage for nectar and small insects throughout the night.







This is one of three Australian Wildlife Colour-in Safaris. Please feel free to download the pages from this site. Download now, FREE!

Green Tree Frog. Australia’s frogs are many and varied, as are their habitats. They are found in burrows in the ground, and high in the trees. One of the most popular is the beautiful Green Tree Frog, found throughout most of the temperate and tropical areas of Australia.

Kangaroo. Probably Australia’s most famous marsupial, the Kangaroo is a powerful animal, who survives danger by hopping away swiftly on muscular hind legs. The male is red in colour and the female is grey. The young when born are underdeveloped and spend a log time in the protection of their mother’s pouch.

Platypus. The Platypus is an Australian mammal, which has the a body and tail similar to that of a beaver, though smaller. It has a flat soft rubbery bill and webbed feet. The Platypus lays two eggs in a burrow, which it digs in a river bank.








This is one of three Australian Wildlife Colour-in Safaris. Please feel free to download the pages from this site. Download now, FREE! It can take up to 30 secs., but worth the wait.


Echidna. This small mammal feeds on ants and termites. Echidnas reproduce by laying eggs. When the young Echidna hatches, it is carried in the mother’s pouch until its spines grow and it can defend itself.

Bilby. During the day, this appealing little animal with its soft silver fur, lives in its burrow. It emerges at dusk to feed on seeds and insects, and gets most of its water requirements from its food.

Cockatoo. Australia’s bushland is brought to life by the noise and colour of a large variety of parrots. One of the most familiar is the White Sulphur Crested Cockatoo.

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