no.
Yes. Cats can survive tornadoes just as people cant, but they can also die just as people can.
There are multivortex tornadoes that at times can look like they are made up of two or more tornadoes
Cats are more like cats.
Yes. "Tornadoes" is the correct plural spelling of tornado.
Many plants and animals live where tornadoes come, because tornadoes occur all throughout the world. In the U.S., tornadoes most frequently hit tornado alley, a strip that covers many U.S. states, including Oklahoma, Kansas and northern Texas. Animals that live in these areas range from pets, like dogs and cats, to animals produced for food and manufacturing, like cows. Plant life in these areas is also wide-ranging, encompassing multiple varieties of trees, flowers, shrubs, vines and important cash crops, like wheat and corn.
me, i love cats
There have been documented cases of small animals like fish or frogs falling from the sky. In such cases strong wind events like tornadoes or waterspouts had picked up the animals initially.
no not like hurricanes tornadoes get named the place where it touchdown like the hallam nebraska tornado or the tri state tornado
Yes he does like cats!
Cats like pandas.
A lot of people use cats for pets like house cats. Cats like lions and tigers are used in a circus and things like that.
No, tornadoes do not have names like hurricanes. Tornadoes are typically identified by the location and intensity of the storm, while hurricanes are given names from a predetermined list for tracking and communication purposes.