Yes, as long as they are in the same genus, consider the various cross-breeds of Dog and also in the Cat family. there are many varieties of Bats, the one animal i am literally afraid of on sight, Baaats! not for me.
Yes.
One species would be forced to leave.
A foreign species introduced from one region to another is called an invasive species. These species can disrupt the natural balance of an ecosystem and have negative impacts on native species and their habitats.
It means scientist using clone technology to breed a super-human, as it may be called. Humans have intervened in the natural selection of the species by using medical means to prolong life and to allow people to procreate when they could not have done so naturally. (This only affects the natural selection of the species when it affects whether or not a person can procreate, so medical intervention that prolongs life well after the age of being able to procreate is unlikely to have an effect on natural selection, unless it allows procreation with aged and therefore less healthy sperm or eggs.) This will eventually have an effect on the species by increasing the likelihood of heritable traits being passed on that are not to the benefit of the species. Evolution by human intervention would require that the intervention changes the set of people able to procreate. In vitro fertilisation would be one means by which this occurs if the difficulty with conceiving is a heritable one. The abortion of foetuses of the less desired sex, or bearing undesired traits or diseases is another.
In ecology, ammensalism occurs when one species hurts another, but does not benefit from this interaction. It is a -/0 relationship. For example, algal blooms can lead to the death of many species of fish, however the algae do not benefit from the deaths of these individuals.
the bat does not have a group.There is so many bat species andall of them are different so man kind decided to ban bat species but they wont live with out groups.so no they don't have one.
Depending on the source one consults, there are between 1100 and 1240 species of bat in the world. Bats are the world's only mammals which are capable of free flight.
Yes. They have one species, the Short-Tailed Bat.
By definition, there is no difference. A dictionary will mention as one of its definitions "to create" under defining "procreate".
You would have one irritated bat and no offspring. Hybrids are only possible with species that are genetically compatible.
When a bat hits a Baseball the bat transfers momentum. Momentum is the force in a moving object, which can be passed on from one object to another.
Most bats have one claw, but in some bat species, they have two.
The word bat has many synonyms in the English language. Bat is a verb, and also describes two nouns. One noun is bat the animal. Another noun in bat, the hitting equipment.
Every species is connected to one another and they have varied relationships. The interconnectivity of the species is what makes the ecosystem functional.
Clown fish have two purposes in life. One is to survive and procreate. The other is to help a certain species of Sea Anemone to survive by living in a symbiotic relationship with it.
The evolution of one species can impact another through coevolution, where changes in one species drive adaptations in another. This can lead to mutualism, where both species benefit, or antagonism, where one species may be negatively affected. Interactions such as competition, predation, and symbiosis can all shape the evolution of species over time.
Speciation