Well...
It's common for animals to live longer in captivity than in the wild.
When captive, they are protected against predators, there are veterinarians if they get sick or injured, and there's never any trouble finding food.
But all things age. Any living thing will eventually die.
If you don't want animals to die in captivity, you'd have to release them before they've gotten old and frail, to die sooner in the wild.
NOOO! Besides research shows that most pandas die within a year in captivity
yes, but they may die
That question doesn't really work, as being a cub is a passing phase. Some cubs die as cubs due to predation, illness or whatever. Others make it into adulthood and reach the average Life of their species.
pandas die because we destroy there habitat.
3 to 10 pandas die in a year
NO, they do not.
About 50 years in the wild. They tend to die in captivity, as they are highly sensitive to climate change.
I have heard of people hunting pandas.
about 10000000 pandas could die each year but lucky for them only about 100 die each year
Rough-scaled pythons are only rare in captivity. They don't thrive in captivity and often become ill and die when kept as pets. In the wild, they have very small territories compared to other pythons and breeding efforts are underway to propagate the species.
They are becoming endangered because they are being kept in captivity because people think they are cute but the tarsier will die 12 years earlier than their original death date. They will die of pyscological trauma or it will commit suicide.
They are becoming endangered because they are being kept in captivity because people think they are cute but the tarsier will die 12 years earlier than their original death date. They will die of pyscological trauma or it will commit suicide.