None. The owner plays the greatest role. Mountain goats are an indigenous species, and have adapted to it. They are few, and isolated. Dairy goats are many, and vastly spread.
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They are affected because north America has mountains, plains, and alot of other geographical things that they can live anywhere and multiply largely as well.
Very few, unless you count Mexico as part of Central America, where there are about 10,000,000 goats.
Yes
Goats have been domesticated by man for thousands of years, so Christopher Columbus brought goats with him when he landed in the "New World" in 1493. Of course, there was no US then. When the first settlers arrived in North America, they brought goats with them. One type of goat, the milch goat, was brought to the continent by Captain John Smith on the Mayflower. Swiss breeds of goat, together with animals from Spain and Austria, were brought to North America between the 1590s and 1700.
Mountain goats are not real goat but an animal unique to North America. They share the same linage as the Prong-horn antelope, which isn't a real antelope either.
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The film "Men who stare at goats" is rated R for language, some drug content and brief nudity by the MPAA in America.
Due to their thick fur they live at high latitude climateThe animal's which live in old climates are:polar bearpenguinsfishbirdsetc
Goats can live in grasslands, though the wilder cousins to the more domesticated goats prefer mountainous terrain to the kind of grasslands that exist in Africa or the Great Plains of North America. However, goats are grazers as well as browsers, and thus will thrive in grasslands.
Mountain goats are found in the Rocky Mountains in the United States, and up along the western coastline of the United States of America up and into Alaska and western Canada.