That'd only be applicable to meerkats in zoos. And zoos will often feed animals several times a day to keep them occupied.
Meerkats are not native to Australia, so there are no wild meerkats in the country. Meerkats are native to Southern Africa, mostly in the Kalahari Desert, a very long way away from Australia. Meerkats can be found at many Australian zoos, such as Taronga Zoo, Halls Gap Zoo, Werribee Open Range Zoo, Melbourne Zoo and Monarto Zoo.
Meerkats are native to Southern Africa, so no.
Meerkats are called Meerkats because they look like cats and they are called a type of meer. So that's why they call Meerkats, Meerkats.
Yes they do. If they can not catch their prey they eat their young ones.
It has a spine - so yes.Yes, meerkats are vertebrates.
Some meerkats share their burrows with yellow mongoose and ground squirrels. So the other animals get a sage home while the meerkats do not necessarily benefit from them.
Meerkats are very small because they do not need to be large. They must be energy efficient and their small size gives them that.
The ones that are there are in zoos, so it would be the number of zoos in the state.
Meerkats are not endangered, so as long as nothing bad starts to happen to them, they don't need human help. :)
Well of wiki they said that Meerkats were found in 1989 but that seems likethey have just been found not so long ago.
they aren't endangered.