No, a single habitat can have many niches. The number correlates with the number of species.
There is massive competition for resources resulting in one of the two species being driven away or made extinct.
Ok this is very creepy but I think u have the same homework as me. The answer is crayfish are omnivores and primary consumers. They eat water plants and tiny water insects such as snails, worms, etc. Fish eat other fish. They are secondary consumers cuz only a herbivore or an ominvore can be a primary consumer. The difference is one is a omnivore and the other is a herbivore. Also one is a primary consumer and the other is a secondary consumer.
The food chain stays intact in the food system .
if someone destroyed their habitats their food there will be gone and the roles of an organisim will deacrese. one of their role is to protect their habitats 3 types of an niche * consumer * producer *decomposers
General or broad niche live almost anywhere & eat almost anything. Specific niche live in one place and only eat certain things. Hoped this helped :)
A habitat niche refers to the specific role or position that a species occupies within its environment, including its interactions with other species and its use of resources. It encompasses aspects such as where an organism lives, what it eats, and how it behaves within its ecosystem. Each species has a unique habitat niche that contributes to the balance and functioning of the ecosystem.
No, a habitat can have multiple niches. Each niche represents a specific role or function that an organism plays within its environment. Different species within a habitat can occupy different niches, allowing for a variety of interactions and relationships to occur.
A specialized species is one that has evolved specific adaptations to thrive in a particular niche or habitat. These adaptations may include unique physical characteristics, behaviors, or food preferences that make the species well-adapted to its environment. Specialized species may have limited ranges or be sensitive to changes in their habitat.
One of the blue crabs' habitats is in estuaries. The pH tolerance is 6-8.
There is massive competition for resources resulting in one of the two species being driven away or made extinct.
Technically, a habitat is where a specific species lives, and describes the location in physical terms (ocean, salt marsh, sandy beach). A "biome" is a type of habitat unassociated with a species. For example, you will find the "boreal forest" biome in two continents, but only one of them is habitat for the north American Snowy Owl. An ecological niche usually refers to the *role* the animals plays, what it eats, what eats it, etc.
Ok this is very creepy but I think u have the same homework as me. The answer is crayfish are omnivores and primary consumers. They eat water plants and tiny water insects such as snails, worms, etc. Fish eat other fish. They are secondary consumers cuz only a herbivore or an ominvore can be a primary consumer. The difference is one is a omnivore and the other is a herbivore. Also one is a primary consumer and the other is a secondary consumer.
The food chain stays intact in the food system .
if someone destroyed their habitats their food there will be gone and the roles of an organisim will deacrese. one of their role is to protect their habitats 3 types of an niche * consumer * producer *decomposers
The term for the role a species has in its environment is its ecological niche. This includes the way the species interacts with its habitat and other species, as well as its position in the food chain and how it helps to shape the ecosystem.
General or broad niche live almost anywhere & eat almost anything. Specific niche live in one place and only eat certain things. Hoped this helped :)
easy....they don't live in "tropical rainforests!"