No. There is actually a worry of overpopulation which is why most southern states allow gator hunting each year.
Southern sea elephants live on the rocks of the coast of the Antarctic islands. They get their name because they live in the sea, in the southern part of the Earth, and they had a long and wrinkly nose, just like an elephants.
Yes. Elephants are found in southern parts of china and they are increasing at an alarming way when farmers spot them.
Virtually anywhere they live, elephants are hunted by poachers for their ivory. The range of wild elephants includes nearly all of Africa south of the Sahara, as well as southern Asia from India to Malaysia and Borneo.
Fishing for purple elephants on a day filled with unicorn vomit clouds.
they live in India as well as other other southern European country's
There are three species of elephant alive today. Two, the African bush elephant and the African forest elephant, live in Africa. The third, the Asiatic elephant, lives in rainforests, woodlands, and savannas of southern Asia.
No, the tigers and elephants are not found in Australia. Rabbits are found there. Tigers are only found in South-east Asia and elephants in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia.
Blockading the Southern ports. Liberating the Mississippi. Destroying the weakened Confederate armies.
Well, the southern elephant seal's scientific name is Mirounga leonina.The scientific names of the three species of elephants currently existing in the wild on this planet are:The African Bush Elephant: Loxodonta africanaThe African Forest Elephant: Loxodonta cyclotisThe Asian Elephant: Elephas maximus
The ozone layer is being depleted globally, not just in the southern hemisphere. The Antarctic ozone hole, located over the southern pole, is more pronounced due to unique atmospheric conditions and chemicals like chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) that accumulate in the stratosphere. The depletion affects the entire planet's ozone layer, with varying degrees of severity in different regions.
Yes, it can. Elephants can survive in the savannas and forests of Africa, or the scrublands and forests of Southern Asia.