Chipmunks are common in North America. Chimpanzees are colonial rodents. Grey or brown with pointy ears. Chipmunks eat a range of foods. Mostly nuts, seeds, & fruits.
Chipmunks
North American deer are white-tailed. White-tail deer inhabit forests and fields. Deer consume grasses, flowers, leaves, twigs, and acorns. Deer hunters utilise deer corn as an attractant.
White-tailed Deer
Western icons include bison. Largest mammalian species. Eat grasses and shrubs. Bison horns contain hair- and nail-strengthening keratin. Predators, adversaries, and partners fear the horns.
American Bison
North American meadows are home to pronghorn antelope. Grazing, they avoid predators. North American pronghorns are second-fastest in the world to cheetahs.
Pronghorns
North America also has Bighorn Sheep. Rocky Mountain sheep. Large horns help them fend off predators. During mating season, bighorn rams bang their horns together.
Bighorn Sheep
Elk stand 6 feet tall at the shoulder. Elk eat leaves, buds, twigs, and flowers. Early summer is elk mating and pregnancy lasts two months.
Elk
Coyotes are wolf-related canids. They live in North, Central, and South America. They're bashful and avoid people. When threatened or protecting their area, they're dangerous.
Coyotes
Groundhogs are common in North America. They dwell underground. The North American groundhog is shy. They're not normally hostile, though.
Groundhog
Wolves are North America's largest canid. Endangered Species Act protects wolves. Therefore, capture and removal from the wild are regulated.