Today, there are several different mammals living in the Bahamas but nearly all of these were brought to these islands by people. The only truly native (Pre-Columbian) mammals of the Bahamas are bats and a rodent called the Hutia. However, European settlers have brought many different mammals to these islands and some of these have become feral (returning to a wild state), including dogs, cats, raccoons, rats, goats, pigs, sheep, donkeys and even horses
Donkeys, horses, and wild boars live in the Bahamas. Huitas, land crabs goats, birds, and lizards also live on the islands. Nonpoisonous snakes rock iguanas, and feral cats live in the Bahamas.
the Bahamas the Bahamas
The islands are full of flora and fauna. The only small mammals that live on the islands are the raccoon and the hutia. Some of the larger mammals are wild donkeys, wild boar, and horses. Two other mammals that live off the coast of the Bahamas are the whale and the dolphin. Some of the reptiles are the rock iguana, the Cat island terrapin, and the hawksbill turtle. They all share the cay. One bird that lives on the island is the flamingo By: tiger4607
Vivo en las Bahamas
Bahamas
land mammals live on land, sea mammals live in the water.
The Bahamas U.s.a and Australia live under republic.
Marine mammals live in the hydrosphere.
Yes, mammals live in estuarys.
When the dinosaurs were on the Earth the Bahamas did not exist. They lived on a super continent called Pangaea, so the answer is yes. The dinosaurs did live on what would become the Bahamas.
According to the IUCN there are approximately 32 native species in the Bahamas, none of which are cats. The two major types of mammals that exist there (excluding bats and amphibious creatures) are Racoons and Hutia. (For quick clarification, the Hutia is a large rodent that appears similar to a groundhog.)
Yes. Some mammals live in deserts.