since the otter is at the top of the food chain only the human and jaguar mainly treat it.
Giant River Otters do camflage by hidind in dark areas on the surface of the water and under aswell.
yes
Giant river otters don't migrate. They stay were they are unless there habitat gets destroyed.
There are sea otters and other otters. In the category of "other" otters, you can include the North American River Otter, Giant Otter of South America, Asian small clawed otters, Congo clawless otters, Capr clawless otters, Southern river otters, hairy nosed otters, spot necked otters, neo tropical long tailed otters, and others I may fail to mention.
There are many types of river otters, and some are social while others are not. The Giant River Otter from the Amazon lives in packs, as do North American river otters, female Southern river otters, (males are solitary). The European river otter is extremely territorial.
There are many types of river otters. The only way I could answer your question would be if you said which type you were referring to. If you mean the giant river otter, it is threatened by habitat loss and poaching, and fishermen sometimes kill them because they think that the giant river otters are a nuisance. In the past, otter pelts were very valuable, and massive amounts of hunting have decimated populations of many, if not all, species of river otters worldwide.
the giant river otter eats mainly fish. but also eat crabs, caimans, snakes, frogs, bird eggs, and molluscs
Missouri River Otters was created in 1999.
Yes, it is a river otter. Sea otters are fatter and are flufflier
YES they are
no
yes mostly near the amazon river and in western Brazil including parts of the nations surrounding it