most rabbits live in woods in North America, jack rabbits live in deserts.
C. Ecosystem. An ecosystem includes all living organisms in an area interacting with each other and with their physical environment. The grassy meadow houses different populations like rabbits, deer, and birds that depend on each other and their surroundings to survive.
In the desert, animals like desert tortoises, rabbits, and insects eat cacti. This impacts the ecosystem by controlling cacti population growth and providing food for other animals in the food chain.
Examples of ecosystems include a tropical rainforest, a coral reef, and a grassland.
Deers, rabits, and trees.
When exotic species are introduced into a new ecosystem, they often don't encounter the same factors that controlled the exotic species population or growth that was in the original ecosystem.
Predators of rabbits, to keep the ecosystem in balance. For example, foxes and snakes
Forest!
They are Herbivores.
Rabbits are are burrowing animals. They have found that they best fit in this niche in the ecosystem.
An ecosystem is stable only if all is in balance. For instance, introducing rabbits to an island could throw the ecosystem out of balance, unless there is a native animal predator to keep the number of rabbits down to a sustainable level.
Rabbits play two roles in the ecosystem: that of prey(food for predator animals of all sizes) and that of grazer(rabbits forage through fields and meadows snipping down growth and distributing fertilizer -- their feces).
deer,gray squirrels , chipmunks,cottontial rabbits
It's an introduced species such as rabbits being introduced into Australia.
birds,plants,rabbits,bears,and insects
Ecosystem
Rabbits in Australia have had a significant impact on the ecosystem by overgrazing native plants, leading to soil erosion and habitat destruction. They also compete with native herbivores for food resources, which can alter the balance of the ecosystem. Additionally, rabbits are known to be carriers of diseases that can affect native species.
An increase in available food sources, such as a bumper crop of vegetation, could increase the carrying capacity for rabbits in a prairie ecosystem. This would provide more resources for the rabbits to feed on, allowing the population to grow until resources are once again limited.