There is alot of reasons they are alike like some obvious ones. They are both reptiles, they eat, they drink, and they are predators and pre.
Carnivores, herbivores and omnivores might share a desert habitat.
Toads live in the forest. Lizards live in the desert. Lizards have tails toads do not.
Something that is the same about mammals and reptiles are that they are both alive. Diferent: reptiles r cold blooded!
The process of photosynthesis is the same in both. However the presence of one important reactant, water, is scarce in a desert.
No, they are not the same, but all reptiles are vertebrates. Not all vertebrates are reptiles, they could be fish, mammals or birds.
Jaguars and anacondas have similar niches in the rainforest as both are top predators that hunt large prey and play a crucial role in regulating population numbers of other species. They both occupy the same trophic level and compete for similar food resources, such as large mammals and reptiles.
We may might not be on the same page, but I believe it is El Chupacabra
Well, reptiles have scales, they eat meat, and all are in the same species, 3 things different are some reptiles constrict their prey, others chew and swallow, last is not all reptiles can swim. ALL REPTILES ARE UNIQUE.
The 'main' animals of the desert are the insects, especially ants and termites. If one were able to capture all the insects in and on the soil of a desert in a certain area and then compare their weight to all the mammals, reptiles, amphibians and birds in the same area, the insects would outweigh all the others by several magnitudes.
No, they are not the same. They are separate and distinct deserts.
The toucan is adapted to a rainforest environment, in the same way that an orangutan is adapted to rainforest living. Your question might need to be expanded: for example, do you want details of the toucan's diet, living and breeding habits? Or do you want to know how toucans evolved into rainforest species? You might like to refer to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toucan and its references to see whether your basic question is answered there.
Not only that dinosaurs are directly descended from reptiles and, under current taxonomy, are classified as reptiles.