Beetle, American burying (Nicrophorus americanus)
Butterfly, Karner blue (Lycaeides Melissa samuelis)
Curlew, Eskimo (Numenius borealis)
Eagle, bald (Haliaeetus leucocephalus)
Lynx, Canada (Lynx canadensis)
Plover, piping (Charadrius melodus)
Puma (=cougar), eastern (Puma (=Felis) concolor couguar)
Sea turtle, leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea)
Tiger beetle, Puritan (Cicindela puritana)
Wedgemussel, dwarf (Alasmidonta heterodon)
Whale, finback (Balaenoptera physalus)
Wolf, gray (Canis lupus)
Generally animals in New Hampshire are not particularly dangerous, as long as one respects that animals are "wild". Animals that are accepted to be potentially dangerous include Black Bear, Moose, Bobcat, Coyote, and Canada Lynx. None of these are known to be aggressive unless provoked.
There are no lizards native to New Hampshire. There are, however, a dozen species of Salamander that call the state home.
As of 2014, about 39,000 Native Americans live in New Hampshire.
New Hampshire
New hampshire
new Hampshire was able to export apples ,fruit , animals and manufactured products
The state whose motto is "live free or die" is New Hampshire.
Maine and New Hampshire have similar animals species. They both have Moose, Deer, snakes, Worms, as much as you can think of. New Hampshire is 4 out of 5 percent forest. New Hampshire also has beavers.
yes
In New Hampshire
No they don't
New Hampshire's natural resources are: cattle, fruits, mica, granite, feldspar, gravel, maple syrup, sugars, wild berries, wild peanuts, lobsters, fish, and fur.