There is just one species of Tasmanian Devil: Sarcophilus Harissii.
There is only one species of Tasmanian devil, Sarcophilus Harrisii. This is the species which is endangered.
The Tasmanian Devil is a marsupial from the Dasyuridae family. Its species is Sarcophilus harrisii.
The devil fish, or giant devil ray, is a species of the eagle ray. Their main threat is pollution and unintentional capture. The species in endangered.
No. Devil Fish are a species of Eagle Ray.
The Tasmanian devil's species name is Sarcophilus harrisii.It is a carnivorous marsupial, and hence is classified as a dasyurid.
There is no "co-animal" for the Tasmanian devil. It is a solitary species that does not interact with other species, except to hunt and eat them.
Tasmanian devils, like many mammals (but unlike many species of marsupials) have four legs upon which they walk.
gold fish
Tasmanian devils are mammals and marsupials: there are too many species of these to list.However, the Tasmanian devil is one of a smaller class of marsupials which are carnivorous. This group is known as the Dasyurids, as they belong to the Family dasyuridae. There are around 55 species in this family. Other dasyurids include:quollantechinusdunnartphascogaleplanigaleThylacine (now extinct)
no it dose not it only has one
Yes. While there are many threats to the Tasmanian devil, there are also numerous protective programmes and captive breeding programmes to almost certainly ensure the survival of the species.
None.There is no species even similar to the Tasmanian devil. The closest species to the Tasmanian devil is the quoll, another native Australian carnivorous marsupial, or dasyurid.As dasyurids, Tasmanian devils are related to other small dasyurids such as kowaris, antechinus, phascogales, planigales. They are only distantly related to the now extinct Tasmanian tigers, or Thylacines.