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  1. Hace 6 días · Learn about moose, the largest members of the deer family, and their distribution, appearance, behavior, and ecology. Find out how moose adapt to different environments, what they eat, how they defend themselves, and how they mate and reproduce.

    • Moose

      The moose is the largest animal of the deer family. It is...

    • Black Bears

      black bear, (Ursus americanus), the most common bear (family...

    • Elk

      The word elk is derived from the ancient Germanic root word...

    • Grizzly

      grizzly bear, (subspecies Ursus arctos horribilis), common...

  2. www.nationalgeographic.com › animals › mammalsMoose | National Geographic

    Learn about moose, the largest of all the deer species, with huge antlers, long faces, and bell-like flaps of skin. Find out how they survive in various habitats, breed, and swim across lakes and rivers.

  3. A moose (Alces alces; called elk in Europe) is a large deer. Some authorities put the American moose in a different species, Alces americanus. A male moose is called a bull, a female moose is called a cow, and a young moose is called a calf. A group of moose is called a herd. The plural form of moose is "moose”.

  4. The Western moose (Alces alces andersoni) is a subspecies of moose that inhabits boreal forests and mixed deciduous forests in the Canadian Arctic, western Canadian provinces and a few western sections of the northern United States and it was introduced to New Zealand.

  5. A moose swims across a mountain lake, reaching the shore alongside a forest. The mooses antlers—which stretch nearly six feet wide from tip to tip—drip water as the animal exits the water...

  6. 14 de nov. de 2014 · Learn about moose, the largest members of the deer family, that live in the northern regions of North America and Europe. Find out their size, habitat, diet, behavior, reproduction, classification and conservation status.

  7. Massive and majestic, moose are a cherished wildlife icon of North America. Moose often roam through residential areas looking for food, and motorists occasionally collide with them. Hunting and habitat degradation are major threats to moose, but now climate change has caused moose populations in Minnesota to fall dramatically.

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