Below are some images of the Cheetah's lovely adaptations:
Picture one: The cheetahs face, well expressed and shown but the cheetah has a dark and or black line that falls from underneath their eyes all they way down by their jaws. Those lines are known as “Tear lines”.
Picture two: The cheetahs eyes are spot on the front of the face to help the predators hunt and or search for their prey. The cheetahs eyes are very sensitive to their surroundings and catch little movement, they spot everything right on the dot.
Picture three: The cheetahs spime, a very flexible part along the cheetah’s body. The super flexible spine helps the cheetah run faster than any other land animal, so it is capable to catch it’s prey and pretty much catch any other relatable fast animal for say ex: the antelopes’.
Picture four: The cheetahs body, more specific the dark shaded spots the cheetah has throughout most of it’s body help camouflage the cheetahs in tall grass or just grass in general. Helps them hide from their prey, so that the prey doesn’t know where it’s predator is located.
Picture five: The cheetahs teeth. Cheetahs have large teeth to bite their prey right in the neck, to kill the prey instantly. Why the neck? Because it’s the easiest place a cheetah can capture their prey and or the fastest way to kill their prey without the fear of loosing grip of their prey and having them get away.
Picture six: The cheetahs jaw. Their jaws can expand an massive amount, basically the jaw can open to the right amount of sticking their preys neck into fitting in their mouth, and pretty much kill their prey in a flash beat second.
Picture seven: The cheetahs paws, and or to be more specific the cheetah’s claws. The cheetah have very long and sharp claws to climb into large trees and climb about anything without a problem. The claws attach to the object and basically give the cheetah a good grip into the object.
Interdependence:
Populations: Cheetahs interact very well towards their own kind, they look after one another and take care of each other. They all live within the same area as one to keep protection towards their cubs and or just to keep protection within their own kind.
Communities: In the wild cheetahs do not have much interactions with any other species but their own. The only time they come in contact with other species is when they are hunting their prey, to find some food for their tribe.
Ecosystem: The cheetahs ecosystem is very similar to desert material but isn’t as hot and has grass and trees, so little rainfall but enough for the trees, grass, and the water streams where the animals within the ecosystem can provide themselves with water. The cheetah is important to it’s ecosystem because it keeps the animals that it hunts on point, to provide for others.
Biome: Cheetahs biome is a grassland. Grasslands are scattered with shrubs and isolated trees.
All the interactions/relationships between the animals in the grassland biome all know how to adapt to one another but at the same time are scared because of if they are bait or not. All the animals in the same ecosystem, they all have share some sort of fashion into showing the interactions of what they do have within one another.
Flow of Energy:
The water cycle helps the savanna biome in ways of supporting little rainfall for the grass, the trees, and the water streams that the animals in the savanna/grassland biome drink from to help keep the animals healthy and satisfied. The water cycle is continuous in the savanna but rains very little just enough to support what plants are in the savanna and give off water to all the animals within the biome.
The Carbon cycle helps the grassland biome out along the four seasons in the a year that the savanna goes through each year. The carbon cycle helps controls plots, increased soil respiration, and helps produce the little or no rain falls within the ecosystem.
Succession:
Succession is a number of people or things sharing a specified characteristic and following one after the other.
In my species there is really no successional changes that occur. There is really hardly any change into the way the animals interact with one another. Successional changes affect the animals environment in ways of the animals leading up to having no interactions towards another, or even with that one animals own kind, own species. Successional changes affect my animal because the cheetah is the main leader in the food chain other then the absolute king the lion. With successional changes all the animals will feel like they are all equal to one another and not fear the predator. The animals individually have to provide their species and take care of one another to keep that one species alive so therefore they can not lose that connection and or interaction with their own kind.
Human impact:
Human activities such as hunting have influenced and affected the environment of the cheetah in ways of , killing the animals in the cheetah's ecosystem can lead up to the predators losing their prey and not having many resources to help provide for a tribe and or just the animals going extinct. Primary consumers need the producers to stay alive as the secondary consumers need the primary consumers to stay alive, without that all the animals within the savanna biome all the species will die out without the food chain, so if one species dies out, more and more start to die out.
Plant adaptations:
Tall grasses/grasses: survive the dry season and periodic fires, they have developed an adaptation that allows them to grow quickly when there is adequate water.
Baobab tree: adapted to the savanna biome by only producing leaves during the wet season. The small size of the leaves help limit water loss.
Acacia tree: survive drought conditions because it has developed long tap roots that can reach deep, ground water sources.
Animals physical and behavioral adaptations:
Behavioral: There are a variety of the cheetahs behavioral adaptations such as their claws and or paws that have give them speed and climb strong forces such as trees. This adaptation is shown in picture seven. Another adaptation could be their spots that are located around their body, the spots help provide the camouflage needed to give the cheetah a good seeking spot to their prey. This adaptation is shown in picture two.
Physical: Cheetah is thought to be the fastest land animal in the world. One physical adaptation that the cheetah can have is their really long tail that helps them keep balance when they run and leap. The cheetah is also very forceable, they can get their prey to do whatever they please and even sometimes their predators. The cheetah is a very feisty species that will fight for what it wants, it doesn't give in or give up, it strives for what it wants or dies trying. These are some physical adaptations that help make the cheetah a successful predator on the African Savanna.
Populations: Cheetahs interact very well towards their own kind, they look after one another and take care of each other. They all live within the same area as one to keep protection towards their cubs and or just to keep protection within their own kind.
Communities: In the wild cheetahs do not have much interactions with any other species but their own. The only time they come in contact with other species is when they are hunting their prey, to find some food for their tribe.
Ecosystem: The cheetahs ecosystem is very similar to desert material but isn’t as hot and has grass and trees, so little rainfall but enough for the trees, grass, and the water streams where the animals within the ecosystem can provide themselves with water. The cheetah is important to it’s ecosystem because it keeps the animals that it hunts on point, to provide for others.
Biome: Cheetahs biome is a grassland. Grasslands are scattered with shrubs and isolated trees.
All the interactions/relationships between the animals in the grassland biome all know how to adapt to one another but at the same time are scared because of if they are bait or not. All the animals in the same ecosystem, they all have share some sort of fashion into showing the interactions of what they do have within one another.
Flow of Energy:
The water cycle helps the savanna biome in ways of supporting little rainfall for the grass, the trees, and the water streams that the animals in the savanna/grassland biome drink from to help keep the animals healthy and satisfied. The water cycle is continuous in the savanna but rains very little just enough to support what plants are in the savanna and give off water to all the animals within the biome.
The Carbon cycle helps the grassland biome out along the four seasons in the a year that the savanna goes through each year. The carbon cycle helps controls plots, increased soil respiration, and helps produce the little or no rain falls within the ecosystem.
Succession:
Succession is a number of people or things sharing a specified characteristic and following one after the other.
In my species there is really no successional changes that occur. There is really hardly any change into the way the animals interact with one another. Successional changes affect the animals environment in ways of the animals leading up to having no interactions towards another, or even with that one animals own kind, own species. Successional changes affect my animal because the cheetah is the main leader in the food chain other then the absolute king the lion. With successional changes all the animals will feel like they are all equal to one another and not fear the predator. The animals individually have to provide their species and take care of one another to keep that one species alive so therefore they can not lose that connection and or interaction with their own kind.
Human impact:
Human activities such as hunting have influenced and affected the environment of the cheetah in ways of , killing the animals in the cheetah's ecosystem can lead up to the predators losing their prey and not having many resources to help provide for a tribe and or just the animals going extinct. Primary consumers need the producers to stay alive as the secondary consumers need the primary consumers to stay alive, without that all the animals within the savanna biome all the species will die out without the food chain, so if one species dies out, more and more start to die out.
Plant adaptations:
Tall grasses/grasses: survive the dry season and periodic fires, they have developed an adaptation that allows them to grow quickly when there is adequate water.
Baobab tree: adapted to the savanna biome by only producing leaves during the wet season. The small size of the leaves help limit water loss.
Acacia tree: survive drought conditions because it has developed long tap roots that can reach deep, ground water sources.
Animals physical and behavioral adaptations:
Behavioral: There are a variety of the cheetahs behavioral adaptations such as their claws and or paws that have give them speed and climb strong forces such as trees. This adaptation is shown in picture seven. Another adaptation could be their spots that are located around their body, the spots help provide the camouflage needed to give the cheetah a good seeking spot to their prey. This adaptation is shown in picture two.
Physical: Cheetah is thought to be the fastest land animal in the world. One physical adaptation that the cheetah can have is their really long tail that helps them keep balance when they run and leap. The cheetah is also very forceable, they can get their prey to do whatever they please and even sometimes their predators. The cheetah is a very feisty species that will fight for what it wants, it doesn't give in or give up, it strives for what it wants or dies trying. These are some physical adaptations that help make the cheetah a successful predator on the African Savanna.