Just like people, animals can be killed and injured by tornadoes and lose their habitats.
Tornadoes can damage or destroy vegetation and kill or injure animals.
Tornadoes can be incredibly destructive to plant life, sometimes completely leveling swaths of forests. Animals can lose their habitats or be killed. In a handful of cases, tornadoes have scoured away several inches of soil. These are among the most violent of tornadoes.
Not really. Tornadoes do not have any noteworthy effect on the hydrosphere.
Tornadoes can destroy animal habitats and kill or injure the animals themselves.
Tornadoes can destroy the homes of people and animals and can kill or injure them.
Nobody needs tornadoes. They harm those that they effect.
Yes. Tornadoes can be very destructive to vegetation and often kill or injure animals.
There is not real scientific evidence that animals predict tornadoes. Tornadoes come with thunderstorms, and some animals, such as dogs, may hear the thunder before we do, but it is unlikely that they can actually predict tornadoes.
Tornadoes can travel down hill. Contrary to popular belief, hills have little to no effect on tornadoes.
Tornadoes have little effect on the geosphere. They can cause erosion and, in rare cases, scouring of the soil and they can uproot trees, which can increase erosion.
No, the Coriolis effect is caused by Earth's rotation.
Tornadoes can damage or destroy vegetation and property and can kill and injure people and animals.