The zone of the Earth in which an organism lives is called its "habitat." A habitat encompasses the physical environment and conditions necessary for the organism's survival, including factors like climate, vegetation, and availability of food and water. Different species may inhabit various types of habitats, such as forests, deserts, wetlands, or oceans.
The aquifer zone that lies between the water table and Earth's surface is called the unsaturated zone or vadose zone. This zone contains soil and rock layers where pores are not completely filled with water, allowing for the movement of both water and air.
Of the 2010 population of the United States' 50 states plus D.C., about 47.4% lives in the Eastern Time zone.
It is called a "time zone".A time zone is an area about 1/24th of the circumference of the Earth in width (15° of longitude) where the local time, as determined by the position of the Sun, is within the same hour, and the time in the center is used as a common standard. So each of these widths represents one of the separate 24 times on the clock (1 AM to 12 noon, 1 PM to 12 midnight). It is always some given hour somewhere in the world.(see related link)a time zone
The zone of accumulation.
The Hottest Part of the Earth's Zones is The Tropic of Caner/Capricorn (23.5*) (South and North)
A habitat refers to the zone in which the organism lives and where it can find food, shelter, protection and mates for reproduction. It is the natural environment in which an organism lives. Organisms generally live in one habitat which has the factors, such as soil, moisture, range of temperature, and light intensity, that are suited to the organism. Different habitata cols be 100's of kilometres apart. For example an organism that lives in a tropical habitat will not compete with an organism that lives in a polar habitat. Or an organism that lives in a marine habitat will not compete with an organism that lives in a stream habitat
The zone of life on Earth is called the biosphere. It includes all regions of the Earth's surface, atmosphere, and hydrosphere where living organisms are found. This zone supports a wide variety of life forms and ecosystems.
The zone in which life occurs on the Earth is called the biosphere.
The desert 'lives' nowhere. It is not a living organism but is the home to many living organisms - plants and animals.
It is called a subduction zone.
It is called the "Habitable Zone" because water can exist in fluid form. It has also been referred to as the "Goldilocks Zone" . Not to hot and not to cold, but just right.
There are 5 layers of the ocean, not 4. They are: 1. Sunlit zone (epipelagic zone) 2. Twilight zone (mesopelagic zone) 3. Dark zone (bathypelagic zone) 4. Abyss (abyssopelagic zone) 5. Trenches (hadalpelagic zone) The scientific names for the layers are in parentheses.
Habitable zone
The epipelagic zone of the ocean is where most life lives.
photophores
The outer zone of Earth's atmosphere is called the exosphere. It is the highest layer of the Earth's atmosphere, blending into outer space. The exosphere is where some satellites orbit and where atmospheric particles can escape into space.
It lives in the midnight zone of the disphotic zone