No, Killing an animal has nothing to do with tornadoes.
tornado alley
Most supercells do not kill, and those that do kill rarely kill more than a few. The main threat for a supercell is the potential for tornadoes, and a supercell can produce multiple tornadoes in succession in what is called a tornado family, which can, in rare cases, kill dozens. In recent years one tornado family on April 27, 2011 killed 87 people in 3 killer tornadoes, and another on the same day killed 69 people in 6 tornadoes. On May 22, 2011 a supercell killed 158 people, all from a single tornado.
That was on 1 Jul 2010. Bangladesh is one of the countries that gets hit by thurderstorms and hurricanes.
No, it is not possible to stop a tornado with another tornado. Tornadoes are formed by specific weather conditions in the atmosphere, and introducing another tornado would not have any effect on the existing tornado.
A tornado emergency is a special kind of tornado warning that is issued when a large tornado is threatening a populated area. A tornado emergency indicates a more dangerous situation than an ordinary tornado warning.
It is unlikely that a blade of grass can kill you in a tornado. Tornadoes are dangerous due to their strong winds and debris, but a single blade of grass would not pose a significant threat to your safety during a tornado.
There is no way of knowing ahead of time whether a tornado will kill someone.
tornado alley
F1 tornadoes can kill, but they rarely do. So an F1 tornado is unlikely to kill you, but you should still take safety precautions to reduce your risk, especially since you can't tell how strong a tornado is before it hits.
yes
There is no way of knowing when the next tornado will be.
About 98% of tornadoes don't kill anyone. Of those that do kill, most kill only 1 or 2 people. The highest death toll on record from a tornado is approximately 1300 as a result of a tornado striking impoverished sections of two major cities in Bangladesh.
THAT Depends on where the Storm that produced that Tornado is going
Yes. A tornado can easily injure or kill you. Some injuries may have lasting effects.
Usually a tornado come after rain, as most tornadoes are located in the rear portion of a supercell.
On the date of April 26, 1989, the Bangladesh tornado killed 1300 people.
A tornado usually emerges from a wall cloud, which is at the base of a cumulonimbus cloud.