In artic regions such as Antarctica then the animal with white fur will be harder for a predator to catch as they will blend right in with the snow and ice, as an animal with dark fur like black fur for instance would stand out in the snow and would be spotted immeadeatly.
It is much harder to drill in the arctic because of the weather, sometimes the parts of an oil rig freeze. In warmer climates you don't have to worry about that. There is less oil in warmer climates.
They flock for protection - the more animals in a group, the harder it is for a predator to pick one animal out and kill it. There's safety in numbers.
It depends. It would be hard to be a predator because you would have to hunt for your food while prey just eats whatever's around them like grass. Meanwhile if you were prey, you would get eaten by another animal.
A rabbit zigzags because it is harder for the predator to catch it.
It is harder to see the animal cells because theybare drastically smaller.
For protection, it is harder for a predator to zero out on one of the fish when they're in a bunch.
No, it can not because it will be harder to find food, and predator will eat it.
It saves energy and makes it harder for a predator to spot them. Win-win for the seahorse.
A caribou has a good sense of hearing to make it harder for a predator to sneak up on it.
'I will work harder'
An animal species is classified as endangered when its kind becomes harder to find in the wild.
Animals have coloring on their furs or hides to blend in with the colors in their natural habitat. This makes it harder for predators to see them, and make it harder for prey to see a predator coming.