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Q: What species have more DNA similarities are found in the same habitat?
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Why is the praying mantis an endangered species?

They are not native to North America, but there is abundant habitat for them here, and the ones that found their ways to the U.S. on ships during colonization became established and started breeding here.


Do organisms have more or fewer similarities as you move from kingdom to species?

Kingdoms are the broadest level of classification (if you discount domain which was only recently added to taxonomy) so they have the least similarities. Species is the most specific, ie the most similarities.


What is the relationship between human population and species endangerment?

The more we grow, the more we cut into resources and habitat, taking these away from other species.


If some of the resources in a habitat are destroyed which would be more likely to survive a generalist species or a specialist species?

generalist


What characteristics does a species have that is more likely to go extinct?

It could be their habitat loss


Compare and contrast habitat and biosphere?

Biodiversity is the diversity between plant and animal species in a habitat. The biosphere is the sphere of all living things. Naturally, the more diverse the plant and animal species are, the more the biosphere expands to include more or new species.


Why would a forest support more species of birds than a grassland?

Vertical habitat and diversity.


How can multiple species develop from one ancestral species?

One way that happens is called speciation. Usually thi shappens when a part of the species is seperated from the other into a different habitat. In about every generation, some genes mutate slightly. In the different habitat, different traits are more likely to help the species, and so more of a certain type live. After a while, with all the mutation and adaptation to the new habitat, that part of the species become so different that even if the two parts of the original species were put back together, they coud not have offspring. And that is when they are considered two different species.


What danger does a specialist face that a generalist does not?

The danger faced by a specialist species is that its food source will run out, or its habitat be destroyed. A specialist is a species which survives on a fairly limited diet (e.g. koalas, which feed almost exclusively on certain species of eucalyptus leaves) or is restricted to a particular locality (such as the tuatara of New Zealand, a species found in only a few offshore islands of the country). Because the specialist has such a limited range of food or habitat, it is more vulnerable to loss of food sources or habitat than a generalist is. Generalists are species which can survive in a wide variety of habitats, or feed on a range of different foods (e.g. the Virginia opossum). As a species, they are far less vulnerable to habitat loss, or to the possibility of losing a primary food source, as they can adapt to finding other foods.


What danger does a specialist face a generalist does not?

The danger faced by a specialist species is that its food source will run out, or its habitat be destroyed. A specialist is a species which survives on a fairly limited diet (e.g. koalas, which feed almost exclusively on certain species of eucalyptus leaves) or is restricted to a particular locality (such as the tuatara of New Zealand, a species found in only a few offshore islands of the country). Because the specialist has such a limited range of food or habitat, it is more vulnerable to loss of food sources or habitat than a generalist is. Generalists are species which can survive in a wide variety of habitats, or feed on a range of different foods (e.g. the Virginia opossum). As a species, they are far less vulnerable to habitat loss, or to the possibility of losing a primary food source, as they can adapt to finding other foods.


What danger does a specialist face that generalist does not?

The danger faced by a specialist species is that its food source will run out, or its habitat be destroyed. A specialist is a species which survives on a fairly limited diet (e.g. koalas, which feed almost exclusively on certain species of eucalyptus leaves) or is restricted to a particular locality (such as the tuatara of New Zealand, a species found in only a few offshore islands of the country). Because the specialist has such a limited range of food or habitat, it is more vulnerable to loss of food sources or habitat than a generalist is. Generalists are species which can survive in a wide variety of habitats, or feed on a range of different foods (e.g. the Virginia opossum). As a species, they are far less vulnerable to habitat loss, or to the possibility of losing a primary food source, as they can adapt to finding other foods.


What dangers does a specialist face that a generalist does not?

The danger faced by a specialist species is that its food source will run out, or its habitat be destroyed. A specialist is a species which survives on a fairly limited diet (e.g. koalas, which feed almost exclusively on certain species of eucalyptus leaves) or is restricted to a particular locality (such as the tuatara of New Zealand, a species found in only a few offshore islands of the country). Because the specialist has such a limited range of food or habitat, it is more vulnerable to loss of food sources or habitat than a generalist is. Generalists are species which can survive in a wide variety of habitats, or feed on a range of different foods (e.g. the Virginia opossum). As a species, they are far less vulnerable to habitat loss, or to the possibility of losing a primary food source, as they can adapt to finding other foods.