This is false. Organisms may play several important roles in an ecosystem. Consider for example and ocean shore environment occupied by a particular species of crab. The crabs are scavengers and eat any organic matter they encounter. They therefore play an important role in the cycling of nutrients in the ecosystem. The crabs are however also an important source of food for a range of other species occupying the same habitat, including octopi, certain fishes and sea otters. Therefore, the crabs are an important part of the food web in the ecosystem. Many species similarly occupy multiple important roles in an ecosystem.
The carbon atom can go to the plants on the Land.
Answer:
Three types of population distribution:
Clumped.
Random.
Uniform.
Explanation:
1. Clumped:
This is the most common pattern of population dispersion.
organisms are clustered together in a group.
This may reflect the patchy distribution of resources in the environment.
2. Random:
This is a typical distribution where individuals do not interact strongly.
The organism has unpredictable distribution.
3. Uniform:
This is the typical environment where individuals compete with each other for scarce resources like water in the desert.
organisms are evenly spaced over the area they occupied.
This was previously answered by "Anshults", https://brainly.in/profile/Anshults-4402044
So all credit to them :)
Answer:
In addition to storing water, the reservoirs behind each of these 500 barriers also trap sand that used to be carried to the shoreline. Dams now withhold sediment from about 16,000 square miles of the state's coastal watersheds and have reduced the flow of sand by 25%, or about 3.6 million cubic yards each year.
Explanation:
Answer:
A story that might be a good human interest story would be the vaccines for corona. Everyone these days are waiting desperately for corona to end. Talking about a vaccine might give them hope, and it would be nice to see how the scientist and doctors truly care for the people. Maybe encourage them to wear the masks until the vaccines come out?