False
The destruction of natural resources in living organisms can have a negative effect on the ecosystem. destroying the environment where an organism lives can reduce the number of organisms in the area.
The ecosystem crashes and essentially everything dies. It is purely Darwinistic at this point. The strongest will survive because of competition for food and shelter. But even the strongest will struggle because of the intense competition for food. So, in short, the ecosystem will essentially collapse with massive fallout.
WELL... Due to the fact that organisms of that period of time and earlier were small, not abundant and soft bodied. Adding in the rock cycle with its weathering, erosion, subduction, melting and so on affects the fossils that are 600million years are scarce.
The number of fossils found in the rock is a factor that does not have a great effect on the weathering of a rock.
An area where, due to a scarse geophysical diversity (desert area, sandy or muddy bottoms and similar) the biodiversity, the number and the biomass of the pertinent living organisms are drastically reduced.
then the organisms must compete for living space The population will decrease.
A 'population'.
Biodiversity
Living things interact in a number of ways. They have symbiotic relationships that can either hurt or be good for the organisms. Most organisms also produce products that other organisms need.
A large number of people (or any other organisms) living in a small space.
A population is a group of one species living in an environment. A community is a collection of these populations, and an ecosystem is the interactions of this community and the environment (biotic and abiotic factors).
None live in the world. While deserts contain a number of plants and animals, they are not living organisms. They are a iome that supports living organisms.
Biodiversity
biome
There is no certain number of habitats in an ecosystem because it depends on the number of organisms living in that ecosystem.
It is impossible to provide an exhaustive list of all the organisms in the world due to the vast diversity of life. Estimates suggest there are millions of species, including bacteria, archaea, protists, fungi, plants, and animals. Taxonomists continue to discover and classify new organisms, indicating that our understanding of the world's biodiversity is not yet complete.
arctic ocean