It is a grey/brown colour which is useful for camouflage and it has a hard, armoured shell over its body so it can protect itself from predators. The woodlouse can roll itself up into a ball when being attacked. The antennae are incredibly sensitive; they make up for poor eyesight. In some species, the female woodlice are completely void of eyesight and use their antennae as a way to see.
Defense against threats and protection against disturbances are reasons why a woodlouse curls into a ball. The crustacean in question (Oniscidea suborder) curls with under-parts inward so that the harder exo-skeleton is what potential competitors and predators find.
Damp, dark, and terrestrial is the condition in which a woodlouse lives. The crustacean in question (Oniscideasuborder) lives on the ground in order to better eat moist, nutrient-rich decaying litter.
Frogs can avoid environmental extremes by seeking shelter in burrows, under rocks, or in water to regulate their body temperature. They may also aestivate or hibernate to survive periods of extreme heat or cold. Additionally, some species have developed physiological adaptations, such as ice-nucleating proteins, to survive freezing temperatures.
Well, darling, animals in a shrubland have adaptations like camouflage to blend in with the surroundings, burrowing abilities to escape the heat, and keen senses to detect predators. It's a tough world out there, so these critters have to be on their A-game to survive in the shrubby jungle. Just remember, in the wild, it's adapt or die, honey!
Crocodiles have behavior adaptations such as being stealthy hunters, using ambush tactics to catch prey. They are also known for their ability to regulate body temperature by basking in the sun or cooling off in water. Additionally, crocodiles exhibit strong maternal instincts, with females fiercely protecting their nests and young.
They like to live in damp moist places.
A woodlouse has a long, stiff, segmented exoskeleton. These features of the woodlouse's exoskeleton enables it to survive under stones and bark.
its gills
because that's their habitat like ours is earth. ;)
in damp dark places eg. under rocks and big stones
It hides under rocks.
A woodlouse belongs to the group called crustaceans, specifically within the class Malacostraca. They are part of the order Isopoda, which includes various types of isopods. Woodlice are terrestrial, unlike many other crustaceans, and are commonly found in damp environments under stones or decaying organic matter.
Fish Have Gills To Breathe Under Waterthey have streamline bodiesthey become flexible
Woodlouse, worms, beetles,ants
there is many adaptation fish have to survive like they have gills to breath under water and a fin to swom better
A sandpiper, the ruddy turnstone has adapted to life on the shoreline, having a long probing beak, by which it searches for small organisms under stones and in the sand.
Wonderful wording - reminiscent of Lynne Truss! They survive in damp, slightly cool shelters, so need to crawl under stones etc. Their food is damp, decaying wood or woody plant material, so they are associated with bark etc.