Pumas are not typically considered a captive breeding animal, as they are generally managed in the wild due to their wide-ranging habitats and natural behaviors. However, they can be kept in captivity for conservation purposes, such as in zoos or wildlife sanctuaries, where breeding programs may be implemented to help support population numbers and genetic diversity. These programs are usually aimed at education, research, and potential reintroduction into the wild, rather than being a primary focus like with some other species.
Captive breeding is when a zoo or wildlife preserve will breed endangered animals or non endangered to help them survive.
No. Pumas and mountain lions are actually the same animal.
balls
no they do not
Animal breeding is done to make sure a pool of genes will remain in certain group of organism. It is so no hybrid crossing will happen, only pure breeds would reproduce. It is for people to get desired results. Example, Animal breeding of chihuahua means all the dogs coming from the one breeding it is chihuahua =) hope it helps!
Sharon
* Habitat protection. * Captive breeding programs. * An informed public. * Legal protection from poaching, etc.
As of mid-2013, there is still no sign of a bilby captive breeding program in place at Currumbin.
keeping them and breeding them in captivity.
Ligers are hybrids and the result of captive breeding. They are the offspring produced from cross breeding a male lion with a female tiger.
not really, you could do captive breeding.
Ikaw ata