Another animal that lives in the same habitat as flamingos is: alligators.
koala
Niche: an organism's role in the environment. Habitat: specifically where it lives. For example, many organisms maybe have the same habitat (under a log, if we're considering insects), but as long as they occupy different niches, they will not be in competition.
A niche is a place where the animal sleeps or hangs out at, and the habitat is where it lives and the climate it lives in. A squirrel's niche would be a hollow tree and its climate is really anywhere other than the tundra or any other cold climate.
If the animal built it and lives in it or it could be a place in the world that the animal lives in, for examples a penguin lives in antarctica , that is their habitat even for dogs and cats and other housepets, the house of their owner could be their habitat too!
Flamingos inhabit the edges of lakes and swamps where they can eat shrimp, algae, and other small creatures that live in shallow water.
A habitat is a place where organisms live that has every thing that organism needs. The official definition for the word habitat is "the natural home or environment of an animal, plant, or other organism."the area where an organism lives, including the biotic and abiotic factors that affect the organism.a habitat is where species lives. for example the polar bear live in Antarctica, a cold, ice, place not in a jungle
Flamingos live in warm climates and inhabit the edges of lakes and swamps where they can eat shrimp, algae, and other small creatures that live in shallow water.
yes they live with other flamingos which is called a 'couple'.
There niche is how they survive and habitat is were it lives.
A habitat is the physical location where an organism lives, while a niche refers to the role that an organism plays within its ecosystem, including how it obtains food and interacts with other species. Essentially, a habitat is the "address" of an organism, while a niche is its "job".
Yes all animals should have habitats that are natural to their species. unfortunately many animals nowadays have been forced to move out of their natural habitats and adapt into other, less natural habitats. However if one animal moves to a different habitat it is still considered a habitat, simply not its natural one.
yes