Certain species are endangered, with only 300-800 members of some species left.
the key deer are an example of this.
The Key deer of The Florida Keys, are an endangered subspecies of the white tailed deer, made tiny through evolving in a micro habitat. There are around 700-800 of these deer left, but they are thriving, and future population growth is expected.
No. The whitetail deer is not endangered but it has been crowded out of great areas where it once roamed abundant.
Estimates are the white tailed deer is more common than ever, even more than when the first Europeans landed. Deer thrive in cut over areas, and find forage in crop fields.
not at the moment but in the past they were
the mouse deeris endangereddo toforestsuccession and loss of trees, plants, and and gain of oxygen
Most species of mule deer are neither endangered or threatened. However, the Cedros Island mule deer is classified as an endangered species.
Endangered species is closer to extinction than threatened ones. Vulnerables species are those that aren't protected and/or isolated.
Two subspecies of the White-tailed Deer are on the U.S. Endangered Species List. The Key Deer is classified as endangered in Florida, and the Columbian White-tailed Deer is classified as endangered in Washington and Oregon.
They are not an endangered species, but they have been protected since 1952.
Because, they are NOT protected from any other creature.
Because, they are NOT protected from any other creature.
no, they are not endangered or threatened, this goes for all species of scrub jays.
Jaguars are fully protected by law. They are listed as near threatened, not endangered.
Whitetail deer are not endangered.
Threatened animals are ones that are legally listed as susceptible to becoming endangered - the animals are becoming more rare because of attributable factors determined by scientific studies. Species of concern is a species that may sometime in the future become threatened but that requires more study. More information about this is: They are species, populations and ecological communities that are considered by the NSW Scientific Committee to be at risk of extinction in the immediate to medium-term future in NSW. Together this information is described as 'threatened'.
threatened
endangered