A species is often defined as a group of organisms capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring. (This can be a rather "fuzzy" definition and scientists have been debating the term for a long time.)
(Biology) taxonomic group whose members can interbreed
a specific kind of something; "a species of molecule"; "a species of villainy"
NOTE : The biological term "species" is singular and plural.
The monetary term "specie" means a form of money that has intrinsic value, usually defined as coins made of precious metals. In economics, any instrument issued by the US Treasury (and not by the Federal Reserve) is referred to as specie. Other forms of currency are "Fiat money" because their value is arbitrarily stated by a government or agency, and is simply agreed upon by others in the same monetary system.
do you mean Symbiotic - it is when two organisms, of different species, live together, often for their mutual benefit
Species varying worldwide means species are different in different parts of the world. For example, a polar bear would not be found in the tropics, and kangaroos would not be found in the Americas.
"Indigenous" means a species or people which originates in a particular place. They are contrasted with introduced species or immigrants.
A taxonimist is a person who studies taxonomy, or the scientific classification of species.
Its means like humans, monkeys, dogs, cats etc
It mean that the species may get higher or get low.
The species is not changing much.
the answer is: The species is not changing much.
Sorry your human species?? What do you mean????
Do you mean a specific Breed, Species, Kingdom???
An index species is somewhere that you can look up different species of animal
The immutability of species is an expression of the belief that all species were created separately by divine intervention.
If individuals in a species never reproduce ,it would mean an end to that species on earth
there are many species of hermit crab which one do you mean?the common hermit crabs species is bernhardus
A species whose numbers are so small that the species is at a risk of extinction.
If by "types" you mean "species" then the answer is no. But if you mean different "variants" of a species then the answer is yes. You need to define your question better.
The number of spots is dependent on the species - there are several species of ladybugs - and doesn't really mean or indicate anything else..