HI:1600s
from: CricketJumper on CHESTNUT
Don't know what you mean by "american lions". Most lions live in Africa. What you can get in America are Mountain Lions AKA Cougars AKA Pumas.
There are a few hundred free-roaming Mustangs survive in Alberta and British Columbia. There are currently over 33,000 feral Mustangs that still roam the United States, mostly in the states of Nevada, Montana, Wyoming and Oregon. Another 30,000 are in holding facilities. These wild horses are protected by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) - in 1971, the United States Congress recognized Mustangs as "living symbols of the historic and pioneer spirit of the West, which continue to contribute to the diversity of life forms within the Nation and enrich the lives of the American people." ~ Hexedgirl92
They're descended from horses brought to the Americas by the Spanish. Now, mustangs primarily live out west; Nevada has the largest mustang population, but they're also in Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming.
There are properly about 5,000 mooses left
There are several million alligators living currently. It is no longer even a threatened species, and is doing just fine in the southeastern United States. There are estimated to be up to 2 million in Louisiana alone. 200,000 There are over one million American alligators left but it was at the brink of extinction The American alligator's population is now over three million, from North Carolina to Texas.
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California is in the United States which is located in the North American continent.
6 and a half hawks left
about 10,000
lots
Puritans
1,000
no where she was born in North America and never left.
Wild horses in North America are direct descendants of horses brought to America from Europe by the Spanish and later migrants. They are probably not directly descended from the horses who left their fossilized bones on the American continent millennia before Columbus.
55,000 in north america
At the top left
The Vikings left America because they faced challenges such as conflicts with Native American populations, limited resources, and harsh environmental conditions. These factors made it difficult for them to sustain their settlements in North America, leading to their eventual departure.