Yes. The Tasmanian wolf, sometimes called a Tasmanian tiger but more properly known as the Thylacine, was literally hunted to extinction after a bounty was placed on it as a livestock killer.
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. Tasmanian Tigers were seen as a threat to livestock, so they were hunted to extinction after Europeans arrived.
No. Scientific and fossil evidence indicates the Tasmanian tiger, or Thylacine, was a solitary animal that lived and hunted alone.
Thylacine is the correct name for the Tasmanian tiger, although it was also called the Tasmanian wolf, due to its wolf-like features. The Tasmanian tiger was prevalent in Tasmania until European settlement, when farmers hunted it to extinction, fearing it was a threat to their livestock. The last known specimen of the Tasmanian Tiger, or Thylacine, died in the Hobart Zoo in September 1936.
The Tasmanian Tiger, more correctly known as a Thylacine, is extinct. It was at the top of the food chain and had no predators, until Man decided this animal was a threat to his livestock, and actively hunted it to extinction.
The thylacine or Tasmanian tiger was hunted to extinction; they were intentionally removed from existence by humans. There was no natural event that caused their end.
The Tasmanian tiger, or Thylacine, was at the top of the food chain. It had no native predators. The reason it went extinct from the Australian mainland was because of increased competition for food once the Aborigines introduced the dingo. When Europeans settled Tasmania, they actively hunted this marsupial to extinction.
Tasmanian devils may not be hunted. They are protected by law.
The habitat of the Tasmanian tiger is Australia
The Tasmanian tiger, more correctly known as the Thylacine, was hunted to extinction because farmers feared they were a great to their stock animals. Consequently, the Tasmanian government offered a bounty on every dead Thylacine, and this encouraged hunting.
yes the tasmanian tiger is warm blooded