Kingdom: Animalia
1. Multicellular organism, Live life as a diploid cells, and interior digestive of food.
Biotic and Abiotic limiting factors:
Biotic:
1. Amount of prey available
2. Amount of plants around too.
3. Poaching
Abiotic:
1. Climate change
2. Earthquakes
3. Lost of habitat
1. Multicellular organism, Live life as a diploid cells, and interior digestive of food.
Biotic and Abiotic limiting factors:
Biotic:
1. Amount of prey available
2. Amount of plants around too.
3. Poaching
Abiotic:
1. Climate change
2. Earthquakes
3. Lost of habitat
Negative human interactions
Human activity can bring a great harmful influence onto the snow leopard. Since snow leopards have such a unique and beautiful coat or fur poachers go out to where the snow leopard roams around and kills it for its fur. So people can buy it to put on clothes or other objects as such. Where the snow leopard lives there are a lot of herding communities around and the domesticated animals that they have tend to overgraze cutting off a food source for the leopard. Which also hurts the animals that they usually eat like the wild sheep and goats around the area reducing their numbers which in turn reduces the snow leopards numbers as well. Not only are the snow leopards prey decreased by overgrazing also by hunting as they are hunted by people and used for their meat or simply a trophy.
Symbiotic relationships:
Commensalism: After the snow leopards has eaten its food, the Himalayan Griffon Vultures eats the carcass this does not harm the snow leopard it only benefits the vulture.
Parasitism: The snow leopard and mites. The mites similar to ticks feed off of the snow leopard spreading diseases and harming the leopard. Only the mite benefits as it has shelter and a food source, they stay on until if they can to eventually kill the snow leopard.
Mutualism: The snow leopard feeds on the weakest and the oldest in the tibetan sheep pack and all that is left of the pack is the strongest and those who can survive make the pack stronger and more legible to survive. The snow leopard gets food and the pack loses its weakest members.
Innate Behaviors:
Snow Leopards hunt during the night to give them a better advantage for hunting purposes, and concealing themselves against prey and those who could potentially harm them (humans)
Snow leopards are also solitary not even associating with their owe kind expect for mating purposes. They don't travel in packs and stay to themselves, even after a mother has a her cubs they are only with her for 2-3 years before they too go off on their own like all the other cats.
Human activity can bring a great harmful influence onto the snow leopard. Since snow leopards have such a unique and beautiful coat or fur poachers go out to where the snow leopard roams around and kills it for its fur. So people can buy it to put on clothes or other objects as such. Where the snow leopard lives there are a lot of herding communities around and the domesticated animals that they have tend to overgraze cutting off a food source for the leopard. Which also hurts the animals that they usually eat like the wild sheep and goats around the area reducing their numbers which in turn reduces the snow leopards numbers as well. Not only are the snow leopards prey decreased by overgrazing also by hunting as they are hunted by people and used for their meat or simply a trophy.
Symbiotic relationships:
Commensalism: After the snow leopards has eaten its food, the Himalayan Griffon Vultures eats the carcass this does not harm the snow leopard it only benefits the vulture.
Parasitism: The snow leopard and mites. The mites similar to ticks feed off of the snow leopard spreading diseases and harming the leopard. Only the mite benefits as it has shelter and a food source, they stay on until if they can to eventually kill the snow leopard.
Mutualism: The snow leopard feeds on the weakest and the oldest in the tibetan sheep pack and all that is left of the pack is the strongest and those who can survive make the pack stronger and more legible to survive. The snow leopard gets food and the pack loses its weakest members.
Innate Behaviors:
Snow Leopards hunt during the night to give them a better advantage for hunting purposes, and concealing themselves against prey and those who could potentially harm them (humans)
Snow leopards are also solitary not even associating with their owe kind expect for mating purposes. They don't travel in packs and stay to themselves, even after a mother has a her cubs they are only with her for 2-3 years before they too go off on their own like all the other cats.