For the most part, moose tend to keep to themselves and not travel in a group. However, a moose may hang out around others when they are young or mating.
Moose are primarily solitary animals. The only groups you'd see of moose is of a cow with one or more of her calves.
Yes. How do you think moose are able to propagate themselves, by asexual reproduction? No, moose don't live forever and need females (and males) to create new generations of moose.
Yes butterflies live in groups. They live by what type of butterfly they are.
No, they live in big groups.
No, they are like most cetaceans and live in groups.
Moose live with other moose in the wild.
Animals that live in groups can defend themselves better than the animals live in solitary. Animals live in solitary means animals live alone by themselves.
It depends on the species.
No, moose do not live in deserts.
I'm not sure what you're referring to, but as far as "family groups" are concerned, this is only applicable to a cow and her calf or calves, which she keeps with her until they're a year old, which is when she weans them off and chases them away, leaving them to fend for themselves. Moose are solitary animals, by the way, not herd-bound unlike other ungulates like deer, elk, cattle, sheep, goats and antelope.
Yup...Moose do live in Wetlands.
Taiga is what moose live in