If all baboons died, it would disrupt the ecosystems they inhabit as they play a crucial role in seed dispersal and maintaining vegetation balance. Their absence could lead to overgrowth of certain plant species, affecting other wildlife that relies on those plants for food and habitat. Additionally, the loss of baboons would impact local food webs, as predators that rely on them as prey would also be affected. Overall, the extinction of baboons could have cascading effects on biodiversity and ecosystem health.
we would all be eaten by flies
We would have all died
If all the seahorses died the crabs, tuna, and penguins would have to find another source of food.
we would die, too
The community would get all the memories
The community would get all the memories
The consumers would die of starvation.
The new Scottish Parliament Building at Holyrood designed by the Catalan architect Enric Miralles and opened in October 2004.it is in Holyrood, Edinburgh.
There would be bad things that happened to insects if all of the guinea fowl died. These insects that fed on the guinea fowl would also die.
There is no reason why it should. But if it did, there would soon be no life left on Earth.
There would not be enough food food energy for sea creatures to survive.
The snake would soon die. Snakes are part of the web of life. They eat smaller creatures that eat plants and would die if all the plants died.