both will experience population drops. if there is no grass, there will be less insects, less mice to eat the insects, and less owls to eat the mice.
The human population helped the mice population in several ways. The first would be eliminating the wolf population, since the primary diet of wolves are mice. We've also helped them by the sheer waste of food in the U.S. since mice feed off the garbage we throw away.
One factor that can affect the populations in an ecosystem is that, if an ecosystem had owls with no predators, the owl population would increase and eat all the mice in the ecosystems. The population of the mice would decrease more and more.
If the population of mice is reduced due to disease, their predators may experience a decrease in food supply, leading to potential population decline among them. Conversely, the population of plants and insects that mice prey on could see an increase, which may impact other species further down the food web.
Mice certainly have had adaptations over time. The fact that mice breed so often and produce so many young is one example of an adaptation.
In terms of ecology, they would be called a population.
a disease that kills a large portion of wolf population affects the mice population because if a lot of the wolf died from the disease, they wouldnt eat deer so then there are more deer. if there are more deer, they need to eat more mice. so mice population would go down a lot.
The rodents that the owl eats would grow in population. Owls help us keep the mice and rat population down.
the ecosystem would go out of orderEX:the mice would have no lynx to eat them,so there would be lots of mice,the mice would eat all the bugs,so no bugs, and the grass has no bugs to eat them so there would bbe lots of grass
175 mice in the world
it has good eyesight helping it spot mice off the ground
Snakes prey on mice and other vermin. If all snakes were removed from a field, the vermin population would probably increase dramatically and the mice and insects would destroy more of the vegetation growing in the field.