No. Scientific and fossil evidence indicates the Tasmanian tiger, or Thylacine, was a solitary animal that lived and hunted alone.Suggestions have been made that the Thylacine hunted in packs for larger prey, but this is only a theory.
No, they are solitary hunters.
They live with their families but hunt alone until their young are old enough to hunt with them
Tasmanian tigers, or Thylacines, are extinct now, but they tended to be solitary animals, not roaming in packs.
In small packs, dholes hunt for deer and wild pigs. In large packs, they have been known to hunt tigers, leopards, and sloth bears.
No. Scientific and fossil evidence indicates the Tasmanian tiger, or Thylacine, was a solitary animal that lived and hunted alone.
To,TigerLover They Hunt Alone From,Shaneda:)
The are lone hunters for the most part, the only exception are tigresses training cubs to hunt.
Sumartra tigers will often hunt alone not in a pack or pride, they can cover up to 20 miles of hunting ground at night.
No, they did not. Chek this web page to support your answer.wiki.answers.com/.../Did_sabertooth_tigers_hunt_in_packs
they hunt in packs
For safety, the Thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger, tended to remain in the underbrush and dense bushland. Unfortunately, this was not enough to secure it against man's incessant need to hunt and destroy.
the tiger hunts alone and the lion hunts with it's pride.