Science, asked by shruthi060, 20 days ago

why do all of the ecosystem do not have same type of living beings?​

Answers

Answered by ashuniraj2005
1

Answer:

An ecosystem consists of a community of organisms together with their physical environment.

Ecosystems can be of different sizes and can be marine, aquatic, or terrestrial. Broad categories of terrestrial ecosystems are called biomes.

In ecosystems, both matter and energy are conserved. Energy flows through the system—usually from light to heat—while matter is recycled.

Ecosystems with higher biodiversity tend to be more stable with greater resistance and resilience in the face of disturbances, or disruptive events

Explanation:

The short answer: incredibly diverse! Not only can ecosystems vary in size, but they can also differ in just about every imaginable biotic or abiotic feature.

Some ecosystems are marine, others freshwater, and others yet terrestrial—land based. Ocean ecosystems are most common on Earth, as oceans and the living organisms they contain cover 75% of the Earth's surface. Freshwater ecosystems are the rarest, covering only 1.8% of the Earth's surface. Terrestrial, land, ecosystems cover the remainder of Earth.

Terrestrial ecosystems can be further grouped into broad categories called biomes, based largely on climate. Examples of terrestrial biomes include tropical rain forests, savannas, deserts, coniferous forests, deciduous forests, and tundra. The map below shows the broad distribution of biomes on Earth.

Hope you gor your answer ☺️.

Answered by Anonymous
2

Explanation:

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