Nature - it is a huge organized system with its rules and regulations that are strictly enforced. That's the law of the food chain - is no exception. The strong eat the weak. And it is not surprising that most of the animal world does not eat grass and bark, and other animals. Much more interesting to the diversity of their taste preferences. It turns out, a hungry leopard can literally eat an elephant. Maybe not an elephant, but the elephant exactly.
A unfed pelican swallows dove without hesitation. Snakes generally picky: they fish, and birds, and frogs, and even-toed ungulates anything goes! Leopards, by the way, is not only interested in mammals, when they can, and to use the snake, although it is unlikely that food anyone would call their favorite. The photo project "Strong Dominates Weak" gives you the opportunity to look at these and other interesting meal. flickr/ROBERT Jackson
The concept of food chains allows further circulation trace chemical elements in nature, although simple food chains, similar to those shown previously, where each organism represented as eating organisms only any one type of rare in nature. Real food connection is much more complex, because the animal can eat different types of organisms belonging to the same food chain or in a different circuit that is especially true for predators (of consumers) higher trophic levels.
Nature is complex. All its elements, animate and inanimate - a whole complex adapted to each other, interacting and interrelated phenomena and creatures. It links in one chain. And if you remove the chain from the total is at least one link, the results can be unpredictable.
Nature is complex. All its elements, animate and inanimate - a whole complex adapted to each other, interacting and interrelated phenomena and creatures. It links in one chain. And if you remove the chain from the total is at least one link, the results can be unpredictable.
flickr/Dries Gaerdelen
flickr/pedro lastra
flickr/Wandering Canadian
flickr/PRONick Milsum
flickr/ATEWITHREL
flickr/Daniel Waters
flickr/Michael Krabbenhoeft
flickr/Carolyn
flickr/Franco Folini
flickr/Diego Hernandez
flickr/Johan Aucamp
flickr/Michael Fitzsimmons
flickr/Jagadip Singh
flickr/Marthinus Duckitt
Source - en.wikipedia.org, enchantedlearning.com
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