Cougars, Wolves, and Bears
no actuly its predators are cougars
No. Antarctica is too cold to support life for any animal, and there is no food chain there.
Cougars feed mostly on primary consumers, such as deer, making them secondary consumers.
Cougars are considered an "apex predator" and therefore basically at the top of their food chain.
Cougars typically have a positive impact on humans as they are an essential part of the food chain. These large cats are normally fearful of humans, heading the other way when they see one, eliminating any negative impact.
Cougars are top predators, so they are at the top of the food chain. Top predators have few competitors or natural enemies. However, wolves and bears are also top predators. Because Cougars, bears, and wolves share the same habitat, they can compete and kill each other if food is scarce.
No, there are no leopards in Antarctica. All the species of mammals in Antarctica are marine in some way or another--whales, penguins, seals, etc.--and no others can stand the harsh climate; not even the mighty leopard. :)
Cougars need a habitat that provides them with prey items as well as food.
Deer have several predators including wolves, coyotes, cougars, bears and lynx. Deer eats vegetation such as leaves, twigs and apples.
Cougars will eat almost any animal they can overtake but their favorite food is the deer as they can get several meals from a single kill.
food