The dodo and the tazmanian tiger to name two. i am sure there are more.
There are many animals that were alive 200 years ago, but are now extinct.
The last known living passenger pigeon died in 1914.
The golden toad
Great Auk
Blue Walleye
... (please add a few more) ...
dodo Answer 2 No, the dodo became ectinct in the late 1600s
i think you forgot the word EXTINCT in your question, but I'm not sure go look it up
Dodo
When a species dies out completely, it becomes extinct.
When the last individual organism dies the animal or plant will become extinct.
That isn't a simple question to answer. Animals don't become extinct in a matter of months or even years. Long-term factors slowly reduce the population. The fewer animals there are, the more congested the gene pool becomes and the smaller the knock that is needed to push the species over the edge. Extinction is a gradual process, and there are many cases where 'extinct' animals have been rediscovered, tens or even thousands of years after they were believed to have died out. Cases in point: Caelocanth and Leadbeater's Possum. An animal is classified as extinct when no living specimens have been (reputedly) sighted for more than (I think this is accurate) ten years. So it's impossible to say what animals have died out this year. If the last sighting of the species was last year and in ten years time there has not been another, that animal will be said to have become extinct this year.
The 'cakatros' fish, and a breed of cat i think is called 'goyroat'
When the last living member of that species dies, the species become "extinct".
All of them. The last dinosaur died some 65 million years ago.
no, animals are still going extinct right now
A few species of lions and tigers have become extinct over the last 100 years. They include the Bali tiger, the Caspian tiger, the saber-tooth tiger, the Tasmanian tiger, and the Javan tiger.
Cheetahs in Africa have not yet become extinct, but that may happen soon given habitat loss and poaching. There are prehistoric cheetahs that have been discovered in North America that went extinct relatively recently (in the last 25,000 years).