Snow is comprised of only water and a tiny amount of inorganic particulate matter. It is not an organism.
Panthera is the genus for the snow leopard.
Snow is comprised of only water and a tiny amount of inorganic particulate matter. It is not an organism.
no. mimicry is when one organism mimics another to survive. a rabbit mimics the snow, witch is not a living organism.
Bird tracks in snow are not fossils, because snow melts and gets covered up by more snow, and so the bird that made them is probably still alive. (If it died shortly after and the tracks were still there, then they might be considered a trace fossil. ;))
snow and small layers of ice accumulate on the crevices and will cave in when a human or other organism steps on it.
Abiotic factors, as opposed to biotic factors, are non-living things that make up an environment. For a snow leopard, abiotic factors include things such as rocks, snow, water, and the quality of the soil.
its a giant white person who walks about thinking he is black even though hes white because hes a snowman
An organism.
An ecosystem.
No, a snowbug is not an insect; it is a colloquial term often used to refer to a type of small, wingless, cold-adapted organism known as a snow flea. Snow fleas are actually tiny crustaceans, specifically a type of springtail, that can be found in snowy environments. They are not true insects, as they belong to a different class of arthropods.
Collective nouns for snow are a blanket of snow, a bank of snow, or a drift of snow.
A living organism