A Quagga only has stripes on its front half; a Zebra over its entire body.
The Quagga was hunted to extinction for meat, hides, and to preserve feed for domesticated stock. The last wild quagga was probably shot in the late 1870s, and the last specimen in captivity, a mare, died on August 12, 1883 at the Artis Magistra zoo in Amsterdam.
The Quagga, Equus quagga quagga, is not anctually an individual species, but a subspecies of the Plains Zebra, Equus quagga.
The first quagga foal of the Quagga Project was born on December 9, 1988. The Quagga Project in South Africa is an effort to re-breed the extinct quagga.
The quagga is a consumer.
I think what you mean is Equus quagga. Similar to a zebra, and native to africa, the Quagga was killed by overhunting, for meat and skins. Its pelt was prized for its distinctive markings, and it was shot as a pest because farmers considered it a nuisance.
'Quagga' is not a word in Latin
The height of a Quagga was 52 inches.
The quagga was a subspecies of zebra that was native to South Africa. The last quagga died in Amsterdam in 1883.
u cant...they can breed animals with the same caresterestics but it will never be the exact same animal... like the Quagga u can look for quagga on Google.com the pics in color are the new quagga the only real one are Black & White.but they can only bring back some animals if they have close relatives still alive the quagga is part zebra. but the quagga created the zebra but the new one is created BY the zebra... that is y it will never completely come back it will look the same thought...
The scientific name for quagga is Equus quagga. It is a subspecies of plains zebra that was native to South Africa but became extinct in the late 19th century.
Cause south African farmers hunted them down for their meat and skin.