I'm not an expert, but a moist environment at the least would lead to faster biodiversity by providing a transmission between species.
because evolution can be successful if the immediate biodiversity stays in the organisms making them diverse and seperating them from the rest
Human activities that might disrupt a habitat include deforestation, agriculture, urban development, pollution, and hunting. These activities can lead to habitat loss, fragmentation, pollution of air and water, and a decline in biodiversity, impacting the ecosystem and the species that rely on it.
To have evolution, you must have random variation and differential reproductive success. Biodiversity represents the random variation found in a population. Natural selection, the way in which evolution works, does not create new traits. It only selects them and allows them to become more prevalent in the population. This happens because the organisms with the favorable traits are able to produce more offspring. Without biodiversity, these traits might not exist in the first place and so could not be favored.
Scientists are interested in studying the rate of evolution because it provides insights into how species have changed over time. By understanding the pace at which genetic variations accumulate in populations, researchers can better comprehend the mechanisms driving evolution and its impacts on biodiversity. The rate of evolution can also inform predictions about how species might respond to environmental changes.
Ecologists might need to understand geology to study how physical landscapes and soil composition affect ecosystems, biodiversity, and species distributions. Geological processes can influence the availability of nutrients, water, and habitat types, which are crucial factors in shaping the structure and function of ecosystems. By understanding geology, ecologists can better predict how ecosystems may respond to changes in the environment.
Carnivores, herbivores and omnivores might share a desert habitat.
lol your scerwed i have the same question in my pearson succes thing
Its important because if we take all their habitat, the animals won't have a place to live any more. Also, for animals who only have one type and species of plant or animal they can eat, and if their natural habitat, probably the only place with that food, is taken away, the animal will become extinct from starvation. And the the values of the natural habitat and the biodiversity will be destroyed. There might also even be a mass extinction of that particular group that species belongs to.
hate to break it to ya.... but......There is no such thing as evolution
i cant answer sorry
The term coevolution (affect) is used to describe cases where two (or more) species reciprocally affect each other's evolution. So for example, an evolutionary change in the morphology of a plant, might affect the morphology of an herbivore that eats the plant, which in turn might affect the evolution of the plant, which might affect the evolution of the herbivore and so on.
seaweed is something you might find in a starfishes habitat.