It was a subspecies of plains zebra. It's scientific name is Equus quagga quagga. Scientists did not technically bring it back from extinction. They are working on breeding it back, meaning breeding individual plains zebras that look like the Quagga. Numerous other attempts are being made to breed back endangered species that have very close relatives still alive, such as the attempts to breed back the Dire Wolf or Aurochs.
They haven't brought it back yet, but they are trying. Go to www.quaggaproject.org to find out more.
firstly, let me say theyre not actually gonna be bringing the quagga back to life, because its dead, its extinct, theyre just going to be breeding zebras with simular features, to make an animal simular visually, to the quagga. theyre basically just breeding zebras to make more zebras, which although they my not look much like zebras, they are. but the answer is, no cause you cant but they can try, cause all theyll do is breed a load of zebras with eachother to make more, slightly different looking zebras.
u cant...they can breed animals with the same caresterestics but it will never be the exact same animal... like the Quagga u can look for quagga on Google.com the pics in color are the new quagga the only real one are Black & White.but they can only bring back some animals if they have close relatives still alive the quagga is part zebra. but the quagga created the zebra but the new one is created BY the zebra... that is y it will never completely come back it will look the same thought...
What if we could bring back the dinosaurs? There are many who think that bringing back extinct species are not a good idea.
Quagga will come to your house, eat all of your potatoes and carrots, then leave in a fancy manner
you revive them in the town of oreburgh in the scientist's building
Prehistoric Park is a fictional TV series. Unfortunately, there are no time machines and dinosaurs have not been brought back from extinction.
Go to the back of Pewter Museum (you need cut), and then talk to the scientist.
The quagga had been hunted to extinction for meat, hides, and to preserve feed for domesticated stock. The last wild quagga was probably shot in the late 1870s, and the last specimen in captivity, a mare, died on 12th August 1883. Because of the great confusion between different zebra species, particularly among the general public, the quagga had become extinct before it was realized that it appeared to be a separate species
The quagga was a recently extinct subspecies of the Plains Zebra. Indigenous to South Africa, it once roamed Cape Province and parts of South Africa in great numbers. Unlike other zebras, with their full-body black and white stripes, the quagga was striped only on the front part of its body, with its hindquarters a solid, darker brown. The stripes on its head faded to a yellow-ish brown body and made for a creature with a very unique set of markings. This subspecies of the Zebra was hunted to extinction for its meat, hide and to protect feed for the domesticated animals of the time. The last wild Quagga is believed to have been shot in the 1870s, and the last known captive was a mare. She died at the Artis Magistra Zoo in Amsterdam, on 12 August 1883. The only Quagga ever photographed alive was a mare that was at the London Zoo in 1870. For more details, please visit sites listed below. Although the original quagga is now extinct, a breeding-back programme has commenced, through selective breeding of the southern Plains Zebras.
People will recreate the quagga by taking zebras that naturally look like quaggas and breeding them with other zebras that look like quaggas and eventually they should have a whole herd that looks like the quagga. for more information on the quagga project visit this website --- http://www.quaggaproject.org/
Since this is an extinct animal, we do not know a lot about the behavior of the animal. They traveled in herds of 30-50, giving some safety in numbers. Like all horse-like animals, they have hooves and teeth they can use to defend themselves, and they can run. Unfortunately, they met up with the ultimate predator- man, and were hunted to extinction.
if you ever play black ops it kinda make sense that scientist tried to bring humans back to life but accidentally made zombies.