Niches within habitats are where organisms live. Organisms claim certain parts of their homelands in order to find their eating, exercising, mating, and resting needs met.
Sponges are normally stationary organisms, they attacj=h themselves to a surface when very small and grow in that same place.
Some multicellular organisms grow by a process called fission. Where the cell produces a copy of itself and this would repeat and repeat. Or else some multicellular organisms like humans grow by spreading out and filling the gaps with new cells.
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False. Foods that allow microorganisms to grow are not called parasites; they are referred to as "perishable" or "potentially hazardous" foods. Parasites are organisms that live on or in a host and depend on it for nourishment, but they are not the same as the microorganisms that can grow in food.
By definition all organisms grow and reproduce.
HABITATAnswer this question…
Parasites.
Monks are religous people living in groups in a place called a monastery, they grow their own food.
Sounds like you're talking about a parasite.
It is called a Vineyard.
Many fruits grow in groups or bunches called "hands".
Ecological succession takes place slowly because the organisms have to grow from very little or no nutrients. The only time it will happen more quickly is when there are more organisms.
Multicellular organisms grow through a process called mitosis. In mitosis, the cell divides itself in two to make more cells and make more body mass.
Multicellular organisms grow through a process called mitosis. In mitosis, the cell divides itself in two to make more cells and make more body mass.
Sponges are normally stationary organisms, they attacj=h themselves to a surface when very small and grow in that same place.
orchard
Some multicellular organisms grow by a process called fission. Where the cell produces a copy of itself and this would repeat and repeat. Or else some multicellular organisms like humans grow by spreading out and filling the gaps with new cells.