nah they're pretty tough survivors :D
Thank God the anacondas are not extinct. The largest is the green anaconda and can be found in the llanos of Colombia and Venezuela, the Pantanal from Brazil, and the Amazon rainforest. The other smaller species is the yellow anaconda and is found in the Pantanal from Brazil.
No. Anacondas are among the largest snakes in the world.
Giant Green anacondas
Anacondas fall under the animalia kingdom, because they are considered animals. Anacondas are very large snakes that are typically found in the rain forest.
Anacondas eat rodents and some reptiles like caiman (a type of crocodillian)
Yes. Animals can make other animals go extinct, it happens in nature all the time. Animals have been going extinct for thousands of years and the most common reason is that one species eats it faster than it can recover. Humans have exponentially increased the speed at which animals are now going extinct, but they were doing it to each other long before humans existed. Anacondas, just like any other animal won't know or care whether another animal is near extinction, so long as it looks like lunch its going to get eaten. Just to name a few, there are several species of monkeys and chimps which are endangered and near extinction which also happen to be a primary food source for large anacondas.
Crocodiles and anacondas eat jaguars, but they are not close to being extinct.
No, the gray fox is in no danger of going extinct.
are the coquerel's sifka lemur going extinct
they are going extinct because the poaching and habitat loss
they are going extinct but not yet
Alpacas are domesticated and at no risk of going extinct.
Elks are going extinct from over hunting and from lack of food. (info from Google)
As of July 2014, there are no signs that bats are going extinct. There are an millions of bats living all across the world.
no.Anaconda is still alive in south america.they were here 200 year ago
They are not fully extinct. but they are going fastly. They are near totally extinct
No they are not.