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A group of caribou is called a herd. Reindeer are also grouped in herds.
No moose do not travel in herds...caribou do. Wheel of Fortune had a puzzle whose answer was 'herd of moose'...wrong wrong wrong.....
They can live in herds of 100,000 to 1,000,000. But, that usually depends on how strong the herds are. Such as if the herds are sick and weak with little food, ( There can be competition between the bison and the caribou for food)or if they might have a sickness sweeping through the herd, or on the other hand; Maybe the herd has a good food supply and a lucky breeding season!
I've never herd if they did...ARGHHH! Pun alert!As above poster indicated, reindeer (and caribou, deer, wapiti, etc) live in herds.
Up to 75 miles if they run for 12 hours without a break.
Herds refer to groups of ungulate or equine animals numbering from as few as two to as many as thousands. It is a term for animals like horses, cattle, zebras, antelope, bison, caribou, etc.
Caribou. Reindeer are what North Americans typically refer to as the the smaller, more domesticated subspecies of the caribou raised in herds in the Hinterlands of Finland, Sweden and Norway, with a few small herds raised in the non-Arctic areas (well south of the tundra and the Arctic Circle) of Canada and the US.
Decrease
when animals travel and live in herds, not alone.
Hunting licenses help to regulate the deer herds. Having a deer license does not mean you can shoot any deer you want. You are allowed so many bucks and so many does. This helps to keep the deer herds in the optimal number so they don't all starve from overpopulation.
Because we hunt them for their pelt and to "protect" livestock and herds of moose, caribou, and deer that are far more plentiful than the gray wolf already. The world needs wolves.
Caribou migrate to cold places. They travel down to the northern U.S states, like Washington.