There is usually fairly significant damage, particularly to any trees that are part of the habitat. Trees and bushes are uprooted and grass may be flattened to the ground. Above ground nests built by birds and small mammals may be destroyed.
The most significant effect on a natural habitat would be the destruction of trees. Even a tornado that is not particularly intense can snap and uproot many trees. The area affected is usually not very large, but it can take decades to fully recover.
Adaptive radiation occurs when a species occupies a habitat with unoccupied niches
Before a tornado occurs, the atmosphere needs to be unstable, with warm, moist air at the surface and cold, dry air aloft. Wind shear is also crucial, as it creates the rotation necessary for a tornado to form. Storm systems or supercell thunderstorms often provide the ideal conditions for tornado development.
The house is invading the tornado's natural habitat, so of course the tornado will fight to keep its territory.
The area in which the tornado happens can erode the area away cause the animals that lived there to have no home or die of the tornado
A tornado. Tornadoes usually occur on land anyway.
It is simply a tornado. Most tornadoes occur on land.
When a tornado touches down it means it has reached the ground and can now cause damage. It is not a tornado until this occurs,
It is rather unusual for a tornado to look like spaghetti. If a tornado does take on such an appearance it most likely means the tornado is dissipating or "roping out." It is believed that this occurs when cold air chokes of the warm air that feeds the mesocyclone, the rotating updraft that drives the tornado. When this happens the tornado begins to shrink and weaken. Winds within the parent storm can somtimes cause a tornado at this stage to bend into unusual shapes.
they die
The tornado
People have to rush to their basements and hide when the tornado comes. If people are outside, they need to immediately go to the nearby building and hide.