i dont know, you tell me.
Mammoth ecosystems refer to the unique ecological environments that existed during the Pleistocene epoch, characterized by the presence of woolly mammoths and other large herbivores. These ecosystems typically featured a mix of tundra and grassland habitats, providing rich vegetation for megafauna. The interactions between mammoths, their predators, and the flora of these regions played a crucial role in shaping the landscape and biodiversity. As the climate warmed and megafauna went extinct, these ecosystems transformed significantly, leading to the modern landscapes we see today.
Nope. From the preserved dung of Columbian mammoths found in a Utah cave, a mammoth's diet consisted primarily of grasses, sedges, and rushes. Just 5% included saltbush wood and fruits, cactus fragments, sagebrush wood, water birch, and blue spruce. So, though primarily a grazer, the Columbian mammoth did a bit of browsing as well.
Yes they do they are just different from each other :)
The paramecium might have a contractile vacuole, whereas cells like animal and plants just have a normal one.
Animal and plant cells are eukaryotic cells. Eukaryotic cells contain many complex structures, with each structure having a different yet vital function.They are the basic building blocks of multicellular organisms. Animal and plant cells are different from each other in that plant cells have cell walls and chloroplasts and animal cells have smaller vacuoles.
Mammoths usually drank water and it had to be clean to.
i dont no i think it is a fox
Megalodons were a huge species of shark that lived from the Oligocene epoch through the Pleistocene epoch. Megalodons lived in almost every sea in the world and, like the modern sharks of today, were fish. Woolly mammoths were a large, hairy elephant that lived during the Pleistocene epoch. They lived on the tundra ,among other habitats, and were mammals.
dinosaurs, saber-toothed tigers, woolly mammoths, and other long-extinct animals
Yes, mammoths lived over vast areas. Woolly mammoths had a range extending from northern Europe across Siberia, through Alaska and Canada, and in the Midwestern USA. Columbian mammoths lived all over North America. There were other species of mammoths that existed prior to that, some of them in Africa.
There are no living descendants of woolly mammoths. African elephants are a separate branch, and Asian elephants are a near relative. While there are other mammoth species, these are currently thought to have evolved alongside the woolly mammoth from species such as the steppe mammoth.
pretty much anything you can think of including like food and clothing and many other things
Scientists found that the cave bear was 100 percent carnivorous due to its big, sharp teeth. They suggested that the cave bear probably ate anything like carrion stolen from other predators, and hunted animals like the prehistoric elk.Cave bears eat caribous, woolly rhinoceros, woolly mammoths, woolly bisons, cavemen, and deer.
Early humans depended on the herds of mammoths, bison, and other large animals for food, clothing, shelter, and many other things. So, when the big game moved, humans followed them.
Woolly mammoths belong to the genus Mammuthus, the same genus as other mammoths. That genus is part of the family Elephantidae, and that is part of the order Proboscidea. Proboscidea is part of the class Mammalia.
Woolly mammoths primarily fed on grasses, sedges, and other herbaceous plants, as well as shrubs and small trees in their cold, tundra habitats. Their grazing habits helped shape the ecosystems of the regions they inhabited. While they were herbivores, they had no natural predators due to their size, although they may have faced threats from early human hunters.
I'm not sure about plants, but animals that lived at the same time as the saber toothed cat would be: Terror birds, early humans, woolly mammoths, woolly rhiocerous. ~ ~Sleenky