Badgers, Foxes, Stoats, Red Deer, Irish Hare and European Hare, Hedgehog, European Rabbit, Grey and Red Squirrels, Bank Voles, Field Mice, Brown and Black Rats, Shrews, Bats, Otters, Mink, Grey Seal, Common Seal, Walrus, Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises',
Just some of the mammals, research further for amphibians, birds etc .. too numerous too mention
Walrus however are rare visitors, with only a handful of confirmed visits
Wild Boar, Elk, Roe Deer, Common Seal, Cross Fox, Badger, Ermine, Arctic Wolf, Gray Seal, Common Otter, European Pine Martin, Killer Whale, Common Porpoise, Euphrosyne Dolphin, Bottle-Nosed Dolphin, Cuvier's Beaked Whale, Common Minke Whale, North Atlantic Right Whale, Long-Finned Pilot Whale, Grey Dolphin, Bottlehead, Pygmy Whale, Atlantic White-Sided Dolphin, White-Beaked Dolphin, North Atlantic Beaked Whale, Gervias' Beaked Whale, True's Beaked Whale, Common Pipistrelle, Brown Big-Eared Bat, Lesser Horseshoe Bat, Whiskered Bat, Natterer's Bat, Lesser Noctule, European Rabbit, Arctic Hare, Eurasian Red Squirrel, and Long-Tailed Field Mouse.
Animals native to Ireland are:
Arctic Hare
Arctic Wolf
Badger
Bats - 6 varieties
Common Otter
Common Seal
Cross Fox
Elk
Ermine
Euraisan Red Squirrel
European Pine Martin
European Rabbit
Gray Seal
Hedgehogs
Long-tailed Field Mouse
Red Deer
Roe Deer
Wild Boar
This selection of Irish animals, native or introduced, is taken from the Appletree Press title Animals of Ireland. There will be a number of extracts from the book in coming months. The book contains highly detailed full colour illustrations to complement the detailed explanatory text.
Common Newt
Triturus vulgaris
Earc sléibhe
Only one species of newt is found in Ireland (there are three in Britain) which should simplify identification. However, being amphibians, newts spend the summer in fresh water and hibernate in winter, usually beneath stones. In this state they have been mistaken for lizards but they do not have the hard shiny and scalyskin of the latter. They are also smaller and have a vertically flattened tail which is 'finned' along its length on both sides. Their size is up to 10 cm (4 inches).
The female is light brownish, paler underneath, and the larger male is greyish, profusely spotted with black. In spring when the pair have taken up residence in a pond, disused well or other freshwater habitat, the male develops a bright orange belly flush with blue and red markings on the tail. A long wavy crest along the back is used to full effect in an elaborate underwater courtship display.
Eggs are laid individually in a folded pondweed leaf; these hatch out into tadpoles complete with gills for underwater breathing. This phase lasts well into autumn when, with the adults, they leave the water to begin the terrestrial phase of their life cycle.
Other Frogs, Amphibians or Reptiles from Animals of Irelandinclude:
Common Frog |
Natterjack Toad |
Viviparous Lizard |
ealgle
lives were?
No wildlife lives on the Antarctic continent, interior or on the beaches.
The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.The Primate of Ireland lives in Armagh, as he is the Archbishop of Armagh.
The lucky three-leaf shamrock is the national flower of Ireland.
Gazelles are not native to Ireland and no Irish zoos or wildlife parks have them, so the answer would be no.
yeti
fota wildlife park
The Institute of Technology in Tralee, Ireland, offers degrees in Wildlife Biology.
snakes
yes. It lives and it is wild
Positively