A group of organisms that can mate and produce offspring which can themselves mate is called a species.
a species
Species
species
The answer is nothing
species
jbbbuuu
no
Nearly all living things produce fertile offspring, otherwise they wouldn't be here in the first place.
This might be thought of as a species if the group indicated was large enough to include all of the potential members that can breed and produce viable fertile offspring. This would mean that animals which can breed and produce infertile offspring such as horses and donkeys which can mate and produce offspring are not of the same species. This situation would be within the bounds of the question. When a group which is of one species but is of limited such a limited population that the only can breed with a small number of individuals and produce a fertile offspring it would be described as a bottlenecked population. This can lead to severe genetic drift in that population.
A species is a group of organisms so similar to one another that they can interbreed/reproduce.
Organisms are classified based on the following:number of cellstype of cellshow they obtain foodOnce you decide upon a kingdom, you then break the divisions down further based on similarities and differences between organisms. The most specific, or basic, division would be the species, in which organisms that are similar enough to interbreed are placed. Different species cannot produce fertile offspring, even if they can breed together once (examples are mules or ligers).
A species.
Yes
They produce offspring so that organisms species doesn't become extinct!
No, organisms of different species can breed and produce offspring. Donkeys and horses can breed and produce mules but mules cannot produce offspring.
no
Nearly all living things produce fertile offspring, otherwise they wouldn't be here in the first place.
Yes
No it is not true.....The offspring of a horse and a donkey is a mule
This might be thought of as a species if the group indicated was large enough to include all of the potential members that can breed and produce viable fertile offspring. This would mean that animals which can breed and produce infertile offspring such as horses and donkeys which can mate and produce offspring are not of the same species. This situation would be within the bounds of the question. When a group which is of one species but is of limited such a limited population that the only can breed with a small number of individuals and produce a fertile offspring it would be described as a bottlenecked population. This can lead to severe genetic drift in that population.
They must be of the same. ---- # Kingdom # Phylum# Class # Order # Family # Genus and obviously, Species. ---- They have to be in all of the same categories listed, or else they are not of the same species.
It is possible because they are the exact same species, Canis lupus familiaris.
once they can no longer breed and produce a fertile offspring with the other group they become a separate species