Feral cats are particularly aggressive, but they do not tend to attack adult Tasmanian devils. They are a threat to young joeys.
No. Cats are not related to tasmanian devils. Cats are placental mammals and Tasmanian devils are marsupials. There are no true native cats in Australia.
Tasmanian devils belong to the family Dasyuridae. The Dasyurids are carnivorous marsupials.
No. Mongooses and Tasmanian devils do not occupy the same continent.
No. Tasmanian devils are marsupials.
No. Tasmanian devils do not attack people. They are shy and reclusive creatures which would much rather avoid people.
No. Tasmanian devils tend to be solitary animals.
Of course Tasmanian devils breed. If they didn't, there would be no Tasmanian devils left today. Tasmanian devils are mammals, which are vertebrates. All vertebrates breed.
Tasmanian devils are useful in that they eat road kill from the side of the road. Unfortunately, this also poses a threat to the creature, as many then become victims of cars themselves.
No. The possibility is almost non-existent.
Tasmanian devils are marsupials of Australia.
Tasmanian devils do not attack humans.
Tasmanian devils adapt to changing conditions in their habitat brought about by European settlement. Land clearing has forced many of them to occupy the fringes of agricultural land, and to adapt to changed food sources. Tasmanian devils are known to feed on road kill, for example, and this shows their adaptability.