The passenger pigeon, quagga, and mammoth have in common that they are all extinct animals.
Passenger Pigeon Irish Deer Thylacine Quagga
There are three different species of zebras: Equus zebra, Equus quagga, and Equus grevyi. The "common zebra" is Equus quagga.
The Quagga, Equus quagga quagga, is not anctually an individual species, but a subspecies of the Plains Zebra, Equus quagga.
The first quagga foal of the Quagga Project was born on December 9, 1988. The Quagga Project in South Africa is an effort to re-breed the extinct quagga.
The quagga is a consumer.
'Quagga' is not a word in Latin
The height of a Quagga was 52 inches.
The quagga was a subspecies of zebra that was native to South Africa. The last quagga died in Amsterdam in 1883.
Dodo, Thylacine, Quagga, Caspian Tiger, Stellers Sea Cow and Pallas Cormorant.
The scientific name for quagga is Equus quagga. It is a subspecies of plains zebra that was native to South Africa but became extinct in the late 19th century.
SilurianBaragwanathia (Species into the Devonian)CooksoniaRhyniaTortilicaulis (straddles Silurian-Devonian boundary) DevonianArchaeopteris (one species into the Carboniferous)DrepanophycusProtosalviniaPsilophytonSphenophyllumWattiezaCarboniferousAnnulariaSigillariaLepidodendronCalamitesSphenophyllumPermianCordaitesGlossopterisSphenophyllum - provided by wikipedia.com copied by dono splingy =)
Yes, a quagga was a mammal a bit like a zebra.