No dogs are not a niche. Dogs are animals. A niche is the function or position of a species within an ecological community.
a niche is the favoured habitat, food etc of an animal.
A niche is everything that an animal needs in the environment to survive. The niche of a prairie dog includes burrows, grassland, and dome craters for observation.
It is possible that they have more than one niche; however, their main niche is that they eat prairie dogs and hardly anything else.
Niche picking means that we tend to do things we are naturally good at or enjoy
Hyenas are part of the order Carnivora, like dogs, but unlike dogs, are part of the suborder Feliformia. Thus, they are more closely related to cats, mongoose, and meerkats than to dogs. They look like dogs and fill a similar niche to dogs, thus representing a good example of convergent evolution.
Poodles, like all domestic dogs, were bred by humans and as such they do not occupy an ecological 'niche'. One could argue that if you look at the poodle's wolf ancestors, this group diverged into two. There were those that began to approach humans for the food we produced, and those that remained wary of us and avoided us. So you could say there was a niche to cohabit alongside humanity, which one group took advantage of, and became the ancestors of today's domestic dogs.
all dogs that are good dogs if there trained to be a good dog
the niche of the cottontail rabbit is what it is
no it is not ever good for dogs to eat.
1. Most of them are friendly and are good with kids 2. Dogs are smart and have good memory and obey their owners (with practice) 3. Dogs make good protectors (watch dogs, guard dogs)
niche
One good example is A hybrid vehicle