The Spotted Cuscus is thriving. It's not endangered. It has almost no predators, and it can adapt well. Humans are inhabiting parts of its habitat, and some hunt it, but this will not endanger it anytime in the near future.
A Spotted Cuscus can live as long as 18-24 years!!
The Spotted Cuscus lives on the Cape York Peninsula (the one going north from northeastern Australia), on New Guinea, on Sulawesi, on all the islands in between Sulawesi and New Guinea, and on some islands east of New Guinea.
yes I believe it is
There are several pecies of cuscus, and some are endangered.The black-spotted cuscus and the Telefomin cuscus are endangered, while another couple of species are considered vulnerable.
The spotted cuscus primarily feeds on leaves, fruits, flowers, and occasionally insects. As a herbivorous marsupial, its diet mainly consists of foliage from various trees, particularly in its native rainforest habitat. It plays a crucial role in its ecosystem by aiding in seed dispersal through its fruit consumption.
Yes. The spotted cuscus, a marsupial found in Queensland, northern Australia, and northern and eastern New Guinea, is nocturnal, like most marsupials.
The chital is listed as least concern by IUCN. No wide spread threats to chitals are there, and many live inside of protected areas. However, certain places face dramatic population decreases and even localized extinctions due to hunting and competition with domestic livestock.
A spotted cuscus is stupid. Nobody cares about it so why bother asking if it is.
Yes, but they're very small.
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18- 24 years