No. Civets are more like cats than humans.
Fossa, humans, dogs, cats, introduced civets, hawks, snakes, and crocodiles are some of their predators.
They have 7 neck vertebrae (the same as humans) and no voice-box.
The predators of the ring-tailed lemur are humans, fossas, hawks, boas, civets, and domestic cats and dogs.
No, humans do not have different breeds. While there are variations in physical characteristics among different populations, all humans belong to the same species, Homo sapiens.
civets eat for a diet . would be rodents,lizards,snakes,frogs,insects,berries and fallen fruits
Civets are actually not related to cats and are definitely not skunks, a whole other family of animals.
yo its Eli 75 yoiu said can living things be related to us humans well they can by having tke same genetics as us humans and our hormones it is ok to have different bodies but same genetics
Oh dear. Civets do not have split hooves. Nor do they, in fact, have cloven hooves. Civets do not have hooves at all. They are, indeed, like the horse, the zebra, the ox, the red river hog--they are mammals. But they are not the same type of mammals at all. Civets, instead, are somewhat catlike. They look a bit like a cat crossed with, say, a lemur and a raccoon and maybe--maybe--a ferret. None of these animals has a single hoof.
Civets are slightly slower than mongooses due to body mass, the top speed a civet was clocked out was 29.18 mph in Ethiopia.
All snakes in Asia have a fearsome predator called the mongoose. This is a small, but vicious carnivore of the same family as hyenas,civets and cats.
The animal most similar to humans in terms of behavior and characteristics is the chimpanzee.
No, humans do not have the same combination of alleles. Alleles are different versions of a gene that can vary between individuals, leading to genetic diversity within the human population. This diversity is what accounts for the differences in traits and characteristics among individuals.