All organism do not live in the same habitat explain
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Each habitat has a different mixture of species living there. A habitat is the place where a population lives. A population is a group of living organisms of the same kind living in the same place at the same time. All of the plant and animal populations living in a habitat interact and form a community.
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All organism do not live in the same habitat explain
- Not every organism inhabits the same habitat. For instance, while fish can only exist in aquatic habitats, camels live in the terrestrial environment. Some creatures coexist in the same environment. For instance, lions and deer share the grassland habitat.
- Each environment that an organism inhabits is distinct from the others. Its natural habitat is inside this environment. Here, an organism can find everything it needs to exist, including food, water, refuge from the elements, and a location to reproduce its young. To be able to survive, all species must be able to adapt to their environment.
- Animals won't do as well if they lack the characteristics necessary for that particular environment. They might not live as well as another plant or animal if something changes in their ecosystem and they don't adapt rapidly.
- We'll see that it's impossible for two species to coexist in the same habitat that have the exact same niche (because they compete for exactly the same resources, so one will drive the other to extinction). Although it is possible for species whose niches just partially overlap to coexist.
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