yes
The trees and shrubs will die and the water will dry up. The organisms that live there (animals, plants, bacteria, fungi) will have to adapt to less water. If they don't adapt, they will die out. And the organisms that adapt will have different characteristics than the organisms that did not adapt and live in different regions.
The swamp has trees and the marsh has plants such as grasses
some species of plants or animals could die out as they can't adapt to the environment
because they have to adapt to the diffrent climate
Because the climate in Illinois can, especially during the winter, be harsh, plants and animals have had to adapt. With global warming, plants and animals have had to adapt to the earlier arrival of spring, unpredictable changes in weather patterns, and for plants and animals living in the Chicago Wilderness, the wetlands are drying out threatening the existence of unique plants and animals that live there.
plants adapt by sunlight and water
If plants do not adapt, they do not survive in that particular environment.
They adapt by adapting
do plants and animals adapt
Pumas do not feed on plants and have little interaction with plants other than using them for shade and cover. Plants have little reason to adapt to pumas.
Plants adapt to growing in Sudan as per enviorenment available to them as mesophytes or xerophytes.
Plants have adapted to avoid photorespiration
Plants mainly undergo modification to increase their abilities to adapt. By modifying themselves, they can better adapt to and survive in their environment.
They adapt to the enviorment.
it is misquiannah
yes they can,thats why you see them surviving even in any season because they can quickly adapt.
they adapt oxgen hiclose so in a matter of fack it means we can die