If the species has left its habitat because they used up all of their food resources, it is a natural instinct for them to wander in search of another area that offers them more opportunities to get food. Often, animal habitats are depleted or destroyed by human intervention. That is called habitat destruction. If the species has slowly died out and only a few are left, they are called an endangered species. If there are none of the species on the entire planet, they are extinct.
i'm not sure its extinction of desertification i'm sorry
If the species has left its habitat because they used up all of their food resources, it is a natural instinct for them to wander in search of another area that offers them more opportunities to get food. Often, animal habitats are depleted or destroyed by human intervention. That is called habitat destruction. If the species has slowly died out and only a few are left, they are called an endangered species. If there are none of the species on the entire planet, they are extinct.
The soles of your feet.
The moon "disappears" when it is a new moon, which is very close to the sun. During that time, the visible part of the moon is so thin that it gets washed out by the intense sunlight.
Yes, Wisconsin is at the northern part of their breeding range. They are an endangered species in Wisconsin and have been protected in the state since 1979.
no it is not a part of a mountain range.
It is a part of the Great Dividing Range (Eastern Highlands). So yes it is part of the range
The word "species" is a noun. Here is an example of its usage in a sentence: There are over 28,000 species of fish on the planet.
as part of one of the parents' species as a part of a pre-existing species
Species... the first part is Family the second is Species
Millions of years ago, there was a species that is the common ancestor of apes and humans. The range of that species was split somehow. One part of the population evolved into humans. The other part evolved into apes. Hence, the apes and monkeys that are alive today are not our direct ancestors, but our evolutionary cousins.
Mount Mazama is part of the Cascade Mountain Range