An organism that is carried into a new location by people is referred to as an "invasive species." These species can disrupt local ecosystems, outcompete native species for resources, and cause significant ecological and economic harm. Invasive species often thrive in their new environments due to a lack of natural predators or competitors. Examples include the zebra mussel and the Burmese python.
Yesenia pestis is an organism carried by fleas and other insects. This bacteria caused up to 60% of the people in Europe to die in the middle 1500's.
So that all people/ scientists can be able to use the species name and be sure that everybody knows exactly which organism they are talking about.
because species are varied from different parts of the world and common names are in different languages like when people in Qatar say apples they mean potatoes, which some people call apples of the earth. However scientific names are in one language (Latin) and no nicknames are allowed
an example of an organism is people and plants
food ,people not making sure they have enough food will do that but the organism is people.
Magnaporthe grisea is a fungus (eukaryotic organism) that is thought to be a cryptic species complex (more than one species). It causes rice rot and damages enough grain that would have feed 60 million people.
The people that carried goods from Europe to west African empires were Portuguese people.
sedimentry rock is rock and dead organism and people are living organism and are people biacth
people who carried the tomb
Exotic. i.e. foreign to that environment; this definition is of broader application than generalized notions of 'exotic'. Furthermore, human activity in the process is what can define the new organism as not being 'local'; otherwise the distinction would be completely arbitrary. If able to naturally mantain a population, these exotic species are said to be 'naturalized' to that environment.-
People can save species ,no haciendo desorder
Soldiers and their families were being carried as passengers on the Birkenhead.