Blubber fur and some other stuff
Their "in-built" behaviour is a major adaption in helping them survive as ,like other rodents, at the first sign of danger the run and hide. Chinchillas are burrowing animals and this adaption helps them survive by giving them a home that would be difficult for some hunters to get into.
They can survive just about anything but Raid and a shoe. They can stay under water 30 minutes, will eat anything including paper, clothing, crumbs. If a nuclear weapon went off they would probably survive that.
If nothing adapted, nothing would be able to survive. "Adaptions are characteristics that enable organisms to better survive and reproduce. There are three types of adaptions; structural, physiological and behavioural."
Animals survive on their own when born and raised in their natural habitat. Animals can survive on their own when humans have not interfered with their maturing and learning process at their mother side; or in rare cases when human experts go through a lengthy process of reintroducing a captive animal into to their native habitat. Human interference can consist of humans capturing an animal, an animal being born in human captivity, or destroying their habitat. Birds, reptiles, and small mammals can sometimes be released (or release themselves) from human captivity and survive on their own if the habitat is conducive to their natural way of life and they are healthy enough to take care of themselves.
A monkeys behavioral adaptations are things that I would like to know about pleasetell me.
Eyes and Ears. They help the Panda to see and hear, without them it would be blind, deaf and vulnerable.
plants have adaptations to help them survive (live and grow) in different areas. Adaptations are special features that allow a plant or animal to live in a particular place or habitat. These adaptations might make it very difficult for the plant to survive in a different place. This explains why certain plants are found in one area, but not in another. For example, you wouldn't see a cactus living in the Arctic. Nor would you see lots of really tall trees living in grasslands.
no
Um... obviously octopusses survive in their habitat, otherwise they would be extinct. Not sure what you are asking here.
migration
ad trees in its cage
Any arctic animals.
in a grassland area
sometimes it will not survive from another animal because it might bit it
lungs, legs, and skin
if you would give it another cold environment.. yes
no because it might not have proper health and it might die