Coral Reefs. For more info, look it up yourself. :D
Near the equator
In the tropics
Near the equator (Apex)
Rain Forest (: (Novanet)
its the marine biome
Terrestrial ecosystems - in order, from most to least productive:1. Swamps, marshes, tropical rain forests (most productive)2. Temperate forest3. Northern coniferous forest (taiga)4. Savanna5. Agricultural land6. Woodland and shrubland7. Temperate grassland8. Tundra (arctic and alpine)9. Desert scrub10. Extreme desert (least productive)Aquatic ecosystems - in order, from most to least productive:1. Estuaries (most productive)2. Lakes and streams3. Continental shelf4. Open ocean (least productive)
i read about this in class, marine because it take up 70% of the earth. It's not just diverse because it takes up that much space, it is because there are a lot of different species living amongst one another.
A rainforest biome is where most pepper grow in. This type of biome roughly covers around 7% of the Earth's surface.
The most diverse biome on Earth is the rainforest. The amazon biome is most diverse among all of the rainforests. New species continue to be found. Between 2010 and 2013 as many as 441 new species were found.
intertidal zone
Rain Forest (: (Novanet)
its the marine biome
Terrestrial ecosystems - in order, from most to least productive:1. Swamps, marshes, tropical rain forests (most productive)2. Temperate forest3. Northern coniferous forest (taiga)4. Savanna5. Agricultural land6. Woodland and shrubland7. Temperate grassland8. Tundra (arctic and alpine)9. Desert scrub10. Extreme desert (least productive)Aquatic ecosystems - in order, from most to least productive:1. Estuaries (most productive)2. Lakes and streams3. Continental shelf4. Open ocean (least productive)
i read about this in class, marine because it take up 70% of the earth. It's not just diverse because it takes up that much space, it is because there are a lot of different species living amongst one another.
A rainforest biome is where most pepper grow in. This type of biome roughly covers around 7% of the Earth's surface.
Probably the ocean biome, but the rain forest biome on land would have the highest species diversity.
Biomes cannot be productive. They just sit there and take up space. Does that sound very productive, not really, and why in the estuaries do you care anyway? When will you ever need to use that information? That's right never.
The Tundra has the least amount of biodiversity.
New York City.
New York City.