Moose are of their own species, they are not in any particular species, even though there are several subspecies of moose in the world.
There are laws that prohibit hunting and killing endangered animals. There are also laws against disturbing habitats of endangered animals, and these laws are helping to protect endangered moose species. The moose is not an endangered species. Ranging over a good part of two continents, it is listed as "Least Concern." There is only one moose species, with several races.
Brown bears, bison, moose, elk, black bears, for land animals. Ocean species are the many whale species, sharks, and elephant seals.
As a species, the moose is not an endangered species.
Moose are not an endangered species
lynxes, moose, and pine trees
No, moose are solitary animals.
No, there is no such thing.
A moose is a brown horned spider, believe it or not.
No. The moose is still common over most of its range. Listed as a species of least concern by the IUCN Redlist.
Moose
Moose are not carnivores, nor predatory animals. They are herbivorous prey-animals, thus they do not "choose their victim."
They don't. Moose are herbivores and eat plant material.