Few, but Yes!!
other animals that live in the river like maybe piranhas or crocodiles or alligators. \
Crocodiles attack people when they come down to the river to wash clothes or to swim. Alligators do not live in Africa.
Yes. The tennessee river has a lot of rocks, and a few dangerous animals. There were sights of american alligators, alligator gars, and water snakes in the tennessee river.
The people of the Nile river thought alligators were like some kind of gods. The people worshiped them and they thought that the Nile river flooded because of the alligator. They were crocodiles actually
There are no documented alligator populations near Savannah, Tennessee. However, there are breeding populations farther upriver in the Wheeler Lake section of the Tennessee River in northern Alabama, and in Shelby, Tipton, Haywood, and Fayette counties in southwestern Tennessee.
River waters are populated by fish, amphibians such as frogs, reptiles such as turtles and alligators and crocodiles, insects, crustaceans, mammals such as Manatees, and various plants.
No. Other than the rare Chinese alligator of the Yangtze River, alligators live only in the southeastern US, primarily Louisiana and Florida.
* Pirananhs(pu-ron-us) * i kno this aient a pish but theres pythons * alligators/crocodiles
The Comal River in Comal County Texas does NOT have any alligators living in it at this time. The river is used by thousands of river visitors every year and there has been no alligator ever reported in recent decades. There are records from locals that tell of alligators living in the Guadalupe River many years ago before Canyon Dam was built upstream. The waters then were warmer, slower and murkier green. As for right now, neither river has any known population of alligators living in or near the water.
It is very common to see otters, Bald Eagles, and muskrats living near the Mississippi River. Over 200 different types of fish also live there.
No...unless someone releases a pet. Either way the water is too cold for them to survive for very long.