No. Except the tiger (species unknown) on the island of Palawan, due to it's close proximity to Borneo, but that was before the Holocene period (contemporary geological period) which begun more than 12,000 years ago. Of course Palawan is quite some distance from most of the Philippines. In terms of Luzon, Visaya and mainland Mindanao, there appears to be no geological fossil record supporting the presence of tigers, and no contemporary reports of their existence in the wild. It seems strange as you would have thought that the Philippines would have been an ideal tiger territory in its virgin state of wilderness several thousand years ago. That having been said it is geographically located at some distance from mainland Asia and due to it's geological history probably broke away long before tiger populations reached it.
They eat dogs cats snakes and bugs
There are no large wild cats in any part of Ireland outside of zoos.
Not any type of wild cats can be owned just feline friends like house cats and other cats that you have as a pet
No, feral cats are considered just that: Feral. Feral cats are usually house cats that have been abandoned or neglected. Most would not survive in the wild like real wild cats for any length of time. This is why a lot of feral cats live in small groups that share the same territory, shelter and food supply.
Wild house cats (strays) will usually hunt to eat mice, birds, chipmunks, or any other small animals around the area.
Yes, of course, once they are adults any wild cat will take care of itself.
Wolves, Foxes, wild cats, wild dogs, birds of prey and any other wild predators in that area.
Answer: Big cats are big, wild felines like lions, tigers, cervals, bob cats, etc... house cats are their smaller, domesticated counterparts like tabbys, ragdolls, siamese, ocicats, etc...
It is possible for most wild cats to mate with each other with the exception of cheetahs. The cheetah's bone structure is just too different from other wild cats for them to be able to produce a hybrid with another cat.
correction to above answer. australia has no native cats but it does have a serious problem with FERAL cats,theses are domestic cats that have gone wild,these cats get quite large,do lots of damage and are a pest
No, they are of a different type of group of big cats and they were the last in their line of that cat group.
Wild animals are not pets! Specially any of the large cats.