some where in the game exept for one glitch that will atomatliccly get u all of themm by shutting off the power while saving after the game has been on for 3 days strait
on scale of all the animals lifespans were is the tasmanian tiger
Find all of the golden cogs in different stages and bring them back to Julius in Rainbow Cliffs (there are 10 golden cogs per stage)
you find them in Cassia
The thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger, was not actually a tiger at all. Tasmanian tigers were actually large marsupial carnivores that used to live in Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea. They are believed to be extinct since the early 1900's.
They are not related. They are both mammals, and that is where the similarity ends. Thylacines (the correct name for Tasmanian wolves) were marsupials. They are now extinct. They had a pouch in which the young developed after birth. Gray wolves are placental mammals. They have a longer gestation period than thylacines, and the young are much more developed when born.
The Tasmanian wolf or Tasmanian tiger, more properly known as the Thylacine, is now extinct. Prior to its extinction, it was a four-legged marsupial which ran and walked on all four legs.
Neither. The Tasmanian tiger (actually the thylacine) was a marsupial; that puts it in whole separate subclass from dogs and cats, which are placentals. The thylacine occupied the ecological niche which is filled in other places by placental predators. All of the animals mentioned are mammals, but that's about as closely as they're related.
The Thylacine (or Tasmanian Tiger is extinct). Also all Australian megafauna is extinct.
There are no Australian tigers. The animal (now extinct) which was known as the Tasmanian tiger was not related to tigers at all. Its correct name was Thylacine, and it was a marsupial, unlike tigers, which are placental mammals. It was only known as the Tasmanian tiger because of its distinctive stripes.
Like all marsupials, the Tasmanian tiger (or Thylacine) joeys were born extremely undeveloped, being small, pink, hairless and blind. At birth they bore little resemblance to the adult Thylacine, but gradually took on their characteristics as they developed in the pouch.
Not at all. The now-extinct Tasmanian wolf, more properly known as the Thylacine (or even Tasmanian tiger), was a marsupial, specifically a dasyurid, or carnivorous marsupial.The wolf is a placental mammal, and a member of the canine family.
Tasmanian tigers, more properly known as Thylacines, were warm-blooded, like all mammals.