Yes, they could. If there was a hole already there, though. They usually would dig their own hole. If they were a big, wild cat like a mountain lion, they might go for a cave. But little house cats might use an already dug out hole for shelter when they're in the woods.
they only burrow to hide or camoflouge under ground
In a burrow!
# rabbits. # ground hogs. # owls.
There are many North American animals that burrow underground. These animals include prairie dogs, as well as the ground hogs.
Bumble, digger, mining, and sweat bees are bees that burrow in the ground. They respectively belong to the Apidae, Anthoporidae, Andrenidae, and Halictidaeinsect families. They collectively may be referred to as burrowing, earth-nesting, and ground-dwelling bees even though bumblebees -- which are social and build colonies -- will be excluded from the designation solitary bees.
As long as the oxygen level is high and food is flowing yeah but I don't recommend it for health.
they only burrow to hide or camoflouge under ground
In a burrow!
burrow is a hole in the ground and a noun
Many different animals burrow the ground. Some of the more common ground burrowers include aardvarks, armadillos, badgers, ants, mongoose, and prairie dogs.
they jsut can
A groundhog lives in the ground in a burrow.
A burrow.
a burrow in the ground or under a rock
a rabbit den a rabbit hole It's a burrow
Cheetahs do not burrow and do live their lives above ground.
They move in circles to burrow themselves in the ground.