Cheetahs are usually solitary animals. However, a female will travel with her cubs and males may form loosely connected groups called coalitions to protect their breeding territory.
No, they live on their own, with their mates and or young.
A cheetah is old enough to live on their own when they are about 18 months old. This is when the mother will actually leave them in a sibling group on their own. The group will stay together for about another year before the females begin going off on their own.
The cheetah is an apex predator and has no regular predators. However, lions, leopards, hyenas and packs of wild African dogs will kill cheetah cubs.
Yes cheetahs are primarily loners who tend to live by themselves and fend for themselves. The only time cheetahs will live with one another is when a female cheetah is raising and fending for her cubs until they are ready to go off on their own.
Cheetahs protect their young! and because they do not really travel in packs. When another animal wants to pick a fight, The Cheetah fight either for its own life, or for the life of its children.
as long as a cheetah
Your question is not properly formed (it makes no sense) however you must understand that wolves live in "packs" not on their own.
They don't. The cheetah and the koala do not even live on the same continent. Koalas live only in Australia, while the cheetah is native to Africa.
Yes,They did live in packs. Good question.
Cheetah's live in lot's of places. Zoo's, Dens, Forest, Wild
Cheetah need to live with other cheetahs like female and pup cheetahs.
Cheetahs generally live a solitary life but are often found in groups of 2 to 4 cheetahs and sometimes more.