a social habitat is where it lives
Social habitat refers to the environment in which individuals of a species interact with each other and establish social structures. It encompasses factors like availability of resources, population density, and behavioral interactions that shape the social dynamics within a population. Understanding the social habitat of a species is important for conservation efforts and managing populations in the wild.
A quantitative survey of organisms in a habitat involves gathering numerical data on the abundance and distribution of different species within that habitat. This typically includes methods such as counting individual organisms, measuring their density, or estimating population sizes to provide a quantitative assessment of the biodiversity and ecological characteristics of the habitat.
The comparative form of "social" is "more social," and the superlative form is "most social."
"Social" in French is translated as "social" (pronounced so-see-AL).
Social work is closely related to other social sciences such as psychology, sociology, and anthropology. It draws on theories and methods from these disciplines to understand human behavior, social systems, and societal issues. Social work integrates knowledge from various social sciences to address individual and social problems, promote well-being, and advocate for social justice.
Another name for social work is "social service work" or "social welfare work."
the habitat must be the color purple because all blackwinged stilts have social problems
Subtropical/tropical dry eucalypt forest and woodland
The leopard gecko's habitat is deserts and sometimes tropical areas
They in Rainforestof South America and relatively live in large social groups
The territorial domain in geo-social & eco-political territories of human activity, presence and habitat.
· habitat · households · human capital · human resources · human rights
In a habitat
habitat, niche, environment are all used to describe this.
David H Hirth has written: 'Social behavior of white-tailed deer in relation to habitat' -- subject(s): White-tailed deer, Social behavior in animals, Animals, Behavior, Habitations
it is a habitat
Habitat
Aquatic habitat Terrestrial habitat Arboreal habitat