| MONOTREME | Variety of mammal restricted to Australia and New Guinea (9) |
| BLACKBIRD | They were taken to Australia and New Zealand in the 19th century. The female of this species makes a nest of plant stems, grass, twigs, and roots in the shape of a cup. In the New World, the name of t |
| BANDICOOT | A small, insect-eating marsupial native to Australia and New Guinea (9) |
| ANTIPODES | Posted in a different way to Australia and New Zealand (9) |
| PADEMELON | Small wallaby inhabiting the coastal scrub of Australia and New Guinea (9) |
| CASSOWARY | Large flightless bird of northeast Australia and New Guinea (9) |
| THORNBILL | Narrow-beaked songbird of Australia and New Guinea (9) |
| KANGAROOS | Large herbivorous marsupials of Australia and New Guinea (9) |
| KOOKABURRA | Kingfisher of the genus Dacelo, native to Australia and New Guinea (10) |
| MARSUPIAL | Type of mammal in which the young are born in an immature state and continue development in their mother's pouch (9) |
| ECHIDNA | Which spiny, ant-eating animal is native to Australia and New Guinea? (7) |
| QUOLL | Carnivorous marsupial native to Australia and New Guinea such as the Tiger - or Bronze - |
| KANGAROO | Marsupial indigenous to Australia and New Guinea (8) |
| ANTIPODEAN | Relating to Australia and New Zealand from a northern hemisphere perspective (10) |
| ALOHA | A Spaniard's welcome to return to Australia, and welcome in part of America |
| EMU | It's unique to Australia, and is back at the heart of consumerism (3) |
| RODENTS | Constituting approximately 40 per cent of mammal species, mammals characterised by a pair of continuouslygrowing incisors, such as mice, rats, squirrels, guinea pigs and chipmunks (7) |
| LORY | Small brightly-coloured parrot with a brushtipped tongue for feeding on nectar and pollen, native to Australia and SE Asia (4) |
| ELNINO | Weather feature that brings drought to Australia and flooding in the Americas (2,4) |
| COCKATOO | Parrot native to Australia and Indonesia (8) |