Want this question answered?
There are over 700 different species of Eucalyptus trees. Most of these are found only in Australia. However, there are some found in New Guinea and Indonesia.
Only one, ginkgo biloba.
If a species lives in only one particular salt marsh biome and the sea level rises to inundate that biome. all members of the species will die out.
Mustelids.Aveline, Bay Server.
Most sumac species that I am familiar with (Staghorn sumac, winged sumac and smooth sumac) are all pioneer species that will grow almost anywhere. I have seen them growing in wetlands and uplands, though not in the very wettest areas. They live only about ten to twenty years, and by that time, other species tend take over.
approx 50,000 species of ectotherms compared to only 16,000 species of endotherms
Endangered are not only trees, these are species of animals and plants,that are on the verge of vanishing from the earth.
There are over 700 different species of Eucalyptus trees. Most of these are found only in Australia. However, there are some found in New Guinea and Indonesia.
If a disease between trees happend only the same species of trees not the whole forest
There are Rox trees on Moshi Monsters in the Port which is a paid Moshi members only area.
Most popular place is above the Seers Village bank, maple trees are members only by the way.
Only one, ginkgo biloba.
Because every species (plant or animal) bears 'offspring' as itself. With plants and trees, the only exception is if a person grafts 2 together to make a new species. Then, the new species could only bear the fruit or characteristics of itself.
No, it's only for members. Maple trees are non members but they are super hard to find in the non member world, there is like 2. but i dont know where they are at.
No. The only truly hibernating marsupial is the Mountain Pygmy Possum, which lives in the Alpine country in the southeast: no members of the kangaroo family (including wallabies) hibernate.
Species. Why? Because there's only 1 animal per species so there are over 1000 trillion known species.
When competition occurs between species, the stronger species remain. This process is called: natural selection.