Most woolly mammoths went extinct roughly 10,000 years ago amid a warming climate and widespread human hunting. But isolated populations survived for thousands of years after that on St. Paul Island in the Bering Sea and Wrangel Island in the Arctic Ocean
Explanation:
A habitat might support more than one species at a time. A niche is specific to a species and only supports a single species of organisms. Habitat is a physical space occupied by species. Niche is the activities and interactions a species has with other species and the environments
pls mark me branilest
Air pollution, when substances such as sulphur dioxide are released into the air
<span>The question is asking us the following: "In the food chain below, which is the producer?
And the food chain is: flower - mouse - snake- hawk", The producer is the organism that can produce energy from the source, typically from the sunlight, without eating parts of other animals. Producers are plants - and almost all plants are produces (some are also consumers). so the answer is "flower'</span>
Mutualism: <span>The bee and the flower. Bees fly from flower to flower gathering nectar, which they make into food, benefiting the bees. When they land in a flower, the bees get some pollen on their bodies, and when they land in the next flower, some of the pollen from the first one rubs off, pollinating the plant. This benefits the plants.
</span>Parasitism: Fleas and dogs. <span>Fleas harm their hosts, such as dogs, by biting their skin, sucking their blood, and causing them to itch.
</span>Commensalism: The relationship between cattle egrets and cattle.<span>The cattle egret will eat insects that have been disturbed when the cattle forage. One species benefits while the other neither benefits or are harmed.
</span>Predation: The relationship between lions and zebras. The predator, the lion, kills and feeds on the prey, the zebra.
Competition: <span>One example of competition between two organisms would be chipmunks and squirrels. They compete for nuts to be able to feed themselves and survive.</span>