Yes. Tornadoes can be very destructive to vegetation and often kill or injure animals.
Tornadoes can destroy animal habitats and kill or injure the animals themselves.
Tornadoes affect most of the vegetation they encounter. Taller plants such as trees and shrubs are usually the most vulnerable, but a strong tornado can even pull low plants such as grass out of the ground.
Tornadoes can destroy animal habitats and killer or injure people and animals. People can lose their homes, workplaces, and other property.
People and animals impacted by a tornado may be killed or injured and lose their homes and habitats. Plants may be uprooted, broken off, or damage.
The only way tornadoes might be beneficial is that they can clear out old trees, allowing new growth.
The temperature of air affect the plants and animals in a quadrat in a variety of ways from the food that the animals will have to eat to the land and place the animal plays a role on mother nature .
Plants and animals affect their environment directly. This is what forms the biodiversity as plants will provide food for the animals and they both need each other for the gaseous exchange.
Penguins don't do anything bad to plants and animals
Yes, they affect both.
Yes. Tornadoes very frequently destroy plants and animal habitats. Every year people lose their homes and are injured or killed by tornadoes.
Yes. Tornadoes very frequently destroy plants and animal habitats. Every year people lose their homes and are injured or killed by tornadoes.
Animals' dung make fertilizer for the plants, enriching the soil. Animals eat plants. Animals trod on plants. Animals consume pesky insects that bother plants. Animals consume not-so pesky instects that help plants. Animals pluck plants and wave them around. Animals rub their rears in plants to mark their territory. Animals' dead bodies make fertilizer, which makes it a tad less disgusting than dung fertilizer. Animals affect the plants in many ways, fundamentally.