No, veterinarians work everywhere around the world, from physicals on camels in the deserts to research on penguins in Antarctica. However, if you are interested in a particular branch of veterinary medicine like alpaca medicine, you will be limited to the area that alpacas are in (South America and rural/suburban America).
An endemic area is a geographical area where a particular disease is prevalent.
Yes
a unit of local gov that performs a single service, such as education or sanitation, within a limited geographical area.
Typically that would be a LAN (local area network)
They're not. Both languages have a limited geographical area.
Geographic context is the geographic area that relates to a particular problem, discovery, or issue.
States do not have a sexual orientation since they are a geographical area (a particular piece of land). So no, it is not.
No, veterinarians are needed and are present pretty much everywhere around the world. There are veterinarians working with the migrating herds in the Arctic tundra, with endangered species on the African savannah and the Amazonian rainforest, in every concentrated human population you can think of, and even one veterinarian who was also an astronaut and worked in outer space. Basically any place there are animals and humans together, there is a veterinarian working there as well.
City networks are commonly known as WAN's, or Wide Area Network's.
this is where an organization is structured according to geographical area.
A population is all the individuals of one species that live in the same area at the same time. OR All the organisms of the same group or species, which live in a particular geographical area, and have the capability of interbreeding.
Riverbasin