Badgers are generally solitary animals, although they can exhibit social behavior in certain conditions. They typically establish and defend their own territories and prefer to live alone, except during mating season or when a mother is raising her young. However, some species, like the European badger, may form small social groups called clans that share a communal den.
Yes, badgers are generally solitary animals. They typically live alone, except during mating season or when a mother is raising her young. While they may share a territory with other badgers, they usually do not form social groups like some other mammals do.
No, badgers live in setts. Squirrels live in dreys.
Badgers live in underground burrows, called 'setts'.
Neither. Badgers live in temperate climates.
No, baboons live in trees and badgers live underground in setts.
No, mice do. Badgers live down the road.
Badgers live all over the world. All of them live underground in burrows called setts.
Badgers live in the open prairie. underground below the roots of the trees. and in rocky areas.
No
yes they do they live in dens
Eupre
In dens in the ground