Yes, pumas (also known as cougars or mountain lions) can eat sheep. They are opportunistic predators and will hunt various prey, including deer, livestock, and smaller animals, depending on their availability. In areas where livestock is present, pumas may target sheep as part of their diet, especially if other food sources are scarce. However, their primary prey typically consists of wild ungulates.
Yes. Sheep are tasty prey for pumas. Yes. Often times they will find their prey in the wilderness, but if the puma can't find any prey it will have to resort to killing livestock such as cows, sheep, horses, etc...
Pumas are what we call carnivores, meaning they only eat other animals with meat.
pumas eat deers elks and mooses jaguars eat insects berries and fresh meat
Pumas do not consider the hawk to be a traditional food source. Pumas have on rare occasion eaten a few hawks though.
Pumas are among the big cat family and are more powerful than coyotes. Coyotes normally eat animals that are below them in the food chain and Pumas are not.
They eat stuff.
No. Pumas and mountain lions are actually the same animal.
o ya
Pumas do not have a major impact on their environment besides taking the prey they need to eat.
Pumas kill and eat deer, raccoons, squirrels, foxes, rabbits and skunks for a living
yes because they eat little boy and lions
pumas eat deer rodents like mice and rats