Answer:
The correct answer to the question: The argument above assumes which of the following? Would be, B: Overgrazing by rabbits does not pose the most significant current threat to the bilby.
Explanation:
The argument here states that there is a problem with a species of animal, a rabbit, which was not indigenous to Tambor Island and which has become a real threat, especially to agriculture. The government´s idea to deal with the issue is to use a virus to infect the rabbits and eliminate most of these invaders from the habitat, but with the least possible impact on other aspects of the life on the island. However, there is a problem that ensues from the proposed solution and that is that wildlife in the island may be placed in danger with the chance that the virus may infect it, particularly an endangered species called the bilby. From all the arguments given in here, the one that is assumed does not pose a real problem, and therefore does not have a negative impact given the situation, is the overgrazing by rabbits, as this does not affect either agriculture, nor the survival of the bilby. The only thing that does pose a threat to the survival of this endangered species, and a direct one, is the solution proposed by the government.
To survive, animals need water, oxygen, food, climate, shelter, and space. Generally, the possible reasons for the decline of herbivores in a population include not enough food or shelter left to sustain the population, an increase in predators, and disease.
Hope This Helps
If you look at the female cat's genital area,the space just under her tail,it will look like an upside down an exclamation mark (!) with the long slit of vaginal area below the anus. while the male cat has a narrow space between the anus and the penis, with the testicles in the middle... i hope u will understand!... :)
(CALCIUM)
regulation in the human body. The role of vitamin D is shown in orange. Vitamin D is carried in the bloodstream to the liver, where it is converted into the prohormone calcifediol. Circulating calcifediol may then be converted into calcitriol, the biologically active form of vitamin D, in the kidneys.