Yes.
There are no civet species that are native to North America.
The North American Opossum, commonly called a possum, is the only modern native marsupial in North America.
Buffalos
Honey bees aren't native to North America but were taken there by the early settlers about 400 years ago.
The first domestic cats in North America came over with European settlers. They were used as rat catchers on the ships and were already domesticated. Cause people love cats and that's its going 2 be okay
There are no civet species that are native to North America.
Domestic cats are the decedents of their wild ancestors so their native habitat is where the ancestor lived.
The giant panda is native to China. There are no giant pandas native to North America.
Thorny devils are not native to North America. They are native to Australia.
The potato is native to North America.
Not at all. The peacock is native to Asia, but feral populations live in North America.
The native people of northern North America and Greenland are called Inuit.
Yes, there are still big cats in North America. Most notably mountain lions.
Cougar/Mountain Lion/Puma/Catamount/Panther (all of North America) Jaguar (southern United States to Central America) Bobcat (southern Canada to northern Mexico) Canadian Lynx (Canada and northern United States) Ocelot (Mexico and Central America and southern United States) Margay (Mexico and Central America) Oncilla (Central America) Jaguarundi (Central America, Mexico and the southern United States)
No.
No, buffalo are native to North America.
Blueberry and Cranberry - both genus Vaccinium - are superfruit that are native only to North America.