There are several pecies of cuscus, and some are endangered.The black-spotted cuscus and the Telefomin cuscus are endangered, while another couple of species are considered vulnerable.
The chital is listed as least concern by IUCN. No wide spread threats to chitals are there, and many live inside of protected areas. However, certain places face dramatic population decreases and even localized extinctions due to hunting and competition with domestic livestock.
The cuscus isn't endangered but threatened. They need help as all endangered animals do or thei beautiful creater will vanish.
There are lots of species that are listed endangered; Giant Pandas, Talaud Bear Cuscus, Fishing Cat, Tree Hole Crab, Caspian Seal, Slender Billed Vulture. For more information, please see the site listed below.
A spotted cuscus is stupid. Nobody cares about it so why bother asking if it is.
The Spotted Cuscus is thriving. It's not endangered. It has almost no predators, and it can adapt well. Humans are inhabiting parts of its habitat, and some hunt it, but this will not endanger it anytime in the near future.
There are many different species that are endangered in Florida. 8 species of ammphibians endangered 1 species of arachnids endangered 23 species of birds endangered 11 species of clams endangered 8 species of coralsm jellyfish and sea anemones endangered 25 species of crustaceans endangered 33 species of fishes endangered 18 species of insects endangered 15 species of mammals endangered 53 species of plants endangered 9 species of reptiles endangered 13 species of snails endangered
No, it is not an endangered species
A baby cuscus is still called a cuscus?
The Common Spotted Cuscus, is usually about the same size as a large house cat when fully grown. The Cuscus ranges in size from very small, or about 6 inches to roughly 24 inches in length, and can weigh anywhere from 6 pounds to 13 pounds, depending on the species of Cuscus. Their fur ranges in all colors, even changing as some mature, depending again on the species. For more details, please see the sites listed below.
a slogan about endangered species
No, they are not endangered species.
No, kangaroos are not an endangered species.