no there isn't ! if there was another biosphere then all the organisms would live in only that part of the earth but since we don't and that's easy to figure out because animals they go where ever they want to go, they can cross the border state and it wouldn't hurt them because there is only one biosphere there isn't another
A community is the simplest grouping of more than one organism in the biosphere.
i have no clue that's why i was typing it in here!?!?!?!
a community
There is only one biosphere. The biosphere is the culmination of all life on Earth, hence, sphere.
symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits at the expense of the other species?
The biosphere is the biological component of Earth where living organisms interact with one another and their environment.
A biosphere is bigger than an ecosystem. The biosphere includes all of Earth's ecosystems, while an ecosystem refers to a specific community of living organisms interacting with each other and their physical environment in a particular area.
No, not all water on Earth is part of the biosphere. The biosphere includes all ecosystems and living organisms on Earth, with water being one of the essential components for life. Water bodies like oceans, rivers, lakes, and underground aquifers are part of the hydrosphere, which interacts with the biosphere but is not entirely encompassed by it.
The zone in which life occurs on the Earth is called the biosphere.
Animals--along with plants, fungi and all other living organisms--are found in earth's biosphere. This simply refers to everything on the planet which is alive. All organisms in the biosphere are dependant on and connected to each other and the rest of earth's systems. Other earth systems include the atmosphere, geosphere and hydrosphere. Could there be a biosphere if any one of these systems were eliminated?
No one discovered the biosphere; it has always been there.The term "biosphere" was coined by geologist Eduard Suess in 1875, which he defined as, "The place on earth's surface where life dwells."
Lithosphere. No, it's a lot more than that. I'm not really sure what the question means though. I know one classification system is: Biosphere (living things) Atmosphere Hydrosphere Lithosphere.