If the question means "What animals are most closely related to the Tasmanian Devil?", then the four species of quolls are most closely related to the Tasmanian Devil.
The Tasmanian devil is the only member of its genus Sarcophilus. However, besides the quoll, other relatives include the numbat, the now-extinct Tylacine (Tasmanian tiger) and the antechinus.
The most common word by which Tasmanian Aborigines called the Tasmanian devil was "purinina".
A "Tasmanian Devil" is an animal. As such it does not have any geography. The Term "geography" can only be applied to land not animals. For instance you could as "What is the geography of Tasmania" or "What is the geographical habitat of the Tasmanian Devil" but not "What is the geography of a Tasmanian Devil".For the habitat of the Tasmanian devil, see the related question.
the Tasmanian devil
tasmanian devil
The Tasmanian devil belongs to the class of animals known as mammals, or mammalia.Its infraclass is marsupialia.
The only animal dangerous to the Tasmanian devil is the fox. A recently introduced species in Tasmania, the fox is a danger to Tasmanian devil joeys, and it is also a competitor with adults for food.
No. Tasmanian devils are solitary animals. They do not travel in groups of any description.
The Tasmanian devil is a nocturnal hunter and a scavenger. It hunts live prey, but more often feeds on rhe carcasses of animals that are already dead.
The Tasmanian devil does not have a "temper". "Temper" is a word applied to people, not animals. The Tasmanian devil exhibits behaviour.When faced with competition for its food supply or territory, the Tasmanian devil becomes aggressive in its behaviour.
Tasmanian devils like to sleep just like most of all the other animals
The Tasmanian devil, the largest living marsupial carnivore, earned its common name because of its blood-curdling nocturnal screams.
A Kangaroo, a platypus, a koala, a Tasmanian devil.