No. The habitat of the Tasmanian Tiger, or Thylacine, was dry eucalyptus forests and bushland, wetland areas, and grasslands.
yes the tasmanian tiger is warm blooded
The Tasmanian tiger (Thylacinus cynocephalus) is extinct.
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger happened in 2002.
No. Humans destroyed the Tasmanian tiger. The Thylacine, which is the proper name for the Tasmanian tiger, was a marsupial which became extinct in the 1930s due to a bounty being offered for every adult and joey killed. The habitat itself has suffered some clearing for agriculture and urbanisation, but much of Tasmania remains wilderness, and people still speculate about whether some individual Thylacines could still be surviving, hidden, in this wilderness today.
The correct name for the Tasmanian tiger is Thylacine.It was also known as the Tasmanian wolf.
The habitat of the thylacine, also known as the Tasmanian tiger, was open bushland such as dry eucalypt forest or grasslands or even open wetlands.From the time of European settlement, the Thylacine, or Tasmanian Tiger, was only known on the Australian island state of Tasmania. However, fossil evidence from a long time ago indicates they once also lived on the Australian mainland and in New Guinea.The last known thylacine died in the Hobart Zoo in September 1936.
No it is not a tiger! O.K! That is true
Given that the Tasmanian tiger, or thylacine, is now extinct, it would be an easy win for the Tasmanian devil.
The tasmanian tiger went extinct in tasmania in 1986
The Tasmanian Tiger is thought to be extinct. As they were marsupials, the young were called joeys.The Tasmanian tiger was not a tiger nor a wolf (although sometimes being called a Tasmanian wolf); therefore the young were not called cubs or pups.
The proper name for the Tasmanian Tiger is the Thylacine. It is also sometimes referred to as the Tasmanian Wolf.