Raccoons do not live in ponds but may forage for food in a pond looking for crabs, snails, crayfish, frogs and fish. They live on land, however.
You could put a fence around your pond, just high enough so that you can get in but the raccoon can not . Or you do it the other way, which is to keep your fish out of the pond until the raccoon goes away.
Yes
they say fuzzy stuff and kick the water
i sont know
A mammal with 2 black eyes, feeds out of the pond, and is tough when cornered is a raccoon. These are natures very own bad boys!
sounds like a raccoon
how does the yellow rached lily adapt to grasslands
It was likely a raccoon. However, it could have been a opossum or a cat.
A careless raccoon could become a victim of an alligator or, in Central and South America, a crocodile or caiman.
The process of evolution, (that is natural selection of the fittest) does that for them.
The animal would quickly adapt to the new environment.
It is unlikely that all frogs dying would have a significant impact on the raccoon population. Raccoons have a varied diet and can adapt to changes in their environment by consuming other prey items. While frogs may be a part of a raccoon's diet, their absence is unlikely to cause a substantial decrease in the raccoon population.