Wild camels are extinct in their natural distribution in North Africa an the Middle East. However, there are thriving populations of wild camels in outback Australia which are the feral descendants of animals introduced from Afghanistan for camel train transportation in the nineteenth century.
no
Yes, Bactrian Camels live in Mongolia but are becoming extinct
Gorillas are not extinct, but not very plentiful. Located only in Africa.
No camels live in in the Painted Desert today. However, a now-extinct genus of camels once roamed across the Western U.S, including the Painted Desert.
No, they are plentiful and can be hunted in some places.
Gray foxes are quite plentiful throughout their range and in no danger of being extinct.
Umm...I'm pretty sure that there never were any camels in the United States. They evolved after Pangaea (when all the continents were still stuck together) and they don't swim, so there is no possible way for them to get in the US by themselves.
Camels have very few enemies besides humans and formally the now extinct species Caspian tiger. But camels can swing their hind legs forward to kick, it's not quite as effective or powerful as a horse's though.
Usually, the animals that are not preserved are the ones that are not extinct, such as like sharks... There's plentiful of sharks. Nasty creatures. Bit my arm off.
Because camels are camels
no they are extinct in the wild they have many diffrent features such as the babies eat there mum from the inside the only known living specimens are in sanfrancisco zoo
more plentiful, most plentiful