The ocelot is a small wild cat with eye-catching, distinctive patterns. They frequently reside in the southwestern United States' deep underbrush, where their beauty betrays their skill as predators.
With a top speed of 55 mph, the Pronghorn is recognised as the fastest land mammal in North America, demonstrating its incredible evolutionary survival adaptations.
The ring-tailed cat is not as closely related to domestic cats as it is to raccoons, despite its name.
The hellbender, named after the largest salamander in North America, lives in the clear, fast-moving rivers that wind across the eastern part of the country.
As it meanders through the warm coastal waters and riverways of its namesake state, the Florida manatee, a gentle behemoth sometimes referred to as a sea cow, symbolises the ultimate aquatic grace.
The largest freshwater species in North America, this dinosaur-looking turtle is mostly found in the Southeast of the country.
Situated in the Southwest's deserts, the Gila Monster is one of the continent's two venomous lizards.
Being the smallest deer species in North America, the key deer is a diminutive kind of deer.
Far-flung northern forests and alpine regions of North America are home to the wolverine, a lone, vicious animal.