Any of the African preditors would have eaten these animals including lions, hyena, leopards, wild dogs, and cheetah. The quagga was also hunted for meat and hides and to eliminate their competition for grazing land of livestock. The last wild quagga died in a zoo in Amsterdam in the late 1870s.
The Quagga used to eat the same as any common horse or Zebra grass leaves fruits carrots etc
Quaggas areextinct, so they don;t eat anything.
Quaggas used to eat whatever Zebra's eat.
grass and leaves what ever they could find to eat
Both because another animal proply eats a quagge and a quagge propal eats another animal.
Yes quagga is a hervivore because it is from the horse species and all horses are herbivores.
hunters and farmers.
HUMANS!The quagga ate twigs, leaves, herbs and fruit. If you want to answer someones question answer correctly PLEASE it gives false information Of course a quagga didn't eat humans it is very similar to a Zebra!!!!!!!!!!!!
Quagga will come to your house, eat all of your potatoes and carrots, then leave in a fancy manner
The Quagga, Equus quagga quagga, is not anctually an individual species, but a subspecies of the Plains Zebra, Equus quagga.
no they eat what zebras eat today but will not eat another animal they just kill the other animal so they won't get eaten
The first quagga foal of the Quagga Project was born on December 9, 1988. The Quagga Project in South Africa is an effort to re-breed the extinct quagga.
The quagga is a consumer.
Equus quagga
The height of a Quagga was 52 inches.
'Quagga' is not a word in Latin
The quagga was a subspecies of zebra that was native to South Africa. The last quagga died in Amsterdam in 1883.
Yes, a quagga was a mammal a bit like a zebra.
The quagga created would be to overweight to live for more than 2 and a half years as the "quagga" has too much fat around its heart. also it is not a true quagga.