community because one type of organism would be a population
A community, because a population can depend on an Abiotic or Biotic factors.
The answer is no, because a population includes all members of one species in a particular area. So the insects are not in one particular area; they are all over the forest in trees, ground, everywhere- not in one particular area.
All organisms in a forest would be considered a community, as a community encompasses all the different species living and interacting in a specific area. A population, on the other hand, refers specifically to a group of individuals of the same species living in that area. Therefore, while multiple populations exist within the forest, the collective of all organisms represents the broader community.
A community, because a population can depend on an Abiotic or Biotic factors.
In ecology there are levels of organization. These levels are individual, population, community, ecosystem, biome, and biosphere. A community is an area where organisms of different species live together. An example of this would be deer, owls, and bears living in the same area of a forest.
a community
A population consists of all individuals of the same species living in a specific area, while a community includes populations of different species living and interacting with each other in the same area. For example, in a forest ecosystem, the population may refer to all white-tailed deer, while the community would include the deer population as well as populations of trees, insects, and other organisms.
Several populations of different organisms living together in one area is called a community. Examples include a forest community consisting of trees, birds, insects, and other species, or a marine community with fish, plants, and coral. These populations interact with each other and with their physical environment in various ways.
Different conditions support different organisms.
An organism is what would be called, by the crew of the Starship Enterprise, a "life form". It is a living entity of any kind, whether plant, animal, unicellular or multi-cellular. A habitat is the natural setting in which an organism normally lives. A population is a group of organisms in a given habitat, and a community is a population that has some degree of cooperative action among its members.
Organisms in the temperate zones would most likely have adaptations enabling them to respond to different photoperiods. In these regions, there are distinct seasonal changes in day length, requiring organisms to adjust their behavior, growth, or reproductive activities in response to varying photoperiods.
Some organisms population would decrease