Ecological succession
Group of populations interacting with one another forms a community.
Quite possibly. My female beta ate my male beta, so it wouldn't be that weird if a zebra fish did. Another Answer: Zebra fish are "fin nippers" and while they can be kept in community tanks, they are best kept in groups of 3 or more. Beta fish shouldn't be kept in a community tank.
Amphibians are another important cog in our ecosystem. They are extremely valuble to the environment. Some amphibians can be harmful to humans when in direct contact, some frogs for example secrete toxins through there skins which can be harful and in some cases fatal to humans.
Living organisms depend on other living organisms as food sources. AN overpopulation of a certain living organism or a decrease in a population of an organisms may unstable the other organisms that depend on it for food.
Movement is an important adaptation of some animals because when environments that were home to the animals are destroyed or taken over the animal can move to another ecosystem.
Language shift, sometimes referred to as language transfer or language replacement or assimilation, is the progressive process whereby a speech community of a language shifts to speaking another language.
yes
Community.
An ecosystem refers to a relational community that interacts within a time and space in such a way that sustains life.
It Is Called Ecological Succession
its sucession its sucession
Succession.
Here is the correct order: Population, Community, Ecosystem, Biome then Biosphere. Population: A group of the same species. Community: The collection of all the population of all the species in an ecosystem. Ecosystem: Different habitats with different characteristics, separated by Biotones. Biome: A collection of Ecosystems. Biosphere: A collection of Biomes, such as the Tundra.
A community of plants and animals interacting with each other and abiotic factors in an environment is called an ecosystem.
no
Ecological Succession: The process of gradual change from one community of organisms to another.
A gradation from one ecosystem to another when there is no sharp boundary between the two. It is the joint expression of associated community (coenocline) and complex environmental gradients.