Response Adaptations: 1) The Peacock Has A Sharp Beak To Chew Food Easily. Their Beak Allows Them To Basically Be Able To Rip Apart The Food No Matter How Tough It May Be. It Also Can Come In Handy When Running Into A Predator or If They're Desiring A Meal. 2) The Peacock Has Eyes On The Side Of Their Head To See All Around. This Is Good Because, It Allows Them To Know When A Predator Of Some Sort Is Near. Its Also Beneficial For Parenting, Being Able To See The Offspring At All Times. 3) Peacocks Have Developed Big, Strong Wings To Fly Up Into The Trees. This Is Beneficial Because It Allows Them To Move Quickly When Endangered. It Can Also Be A Good Way Of Getting Fruits and Things That Might Grow On The Trees.
Organism Interaction Kingdom: Animalia 1) Peacocks Are Eukaryotic and Heteroptrophic Organisms, Meaning They Are Multicellular and Lack A Cell Wall. 2) They Depend Directly OF Plants For Their Food. Food Is Ingested and Digested In Their Internal Cavity and Food Reserves Are Stored As Fat. 3) They Follow A Definite Growth Pattern, The Adults Have A Definite Shape and Size.
Modern Human Activity Could Negatively Affect The Peacock and Its Habitat In Many Ways. Human Tend To Cut Down Many Of The Trees In Forests For Personal Use. When They Cut Down These Trees, The Peacocks and Many Other Animals Lose A Source Of Protection and Food. Pollution Is Another Big Factor Leading To This Unsafe Environment. Polluting The Water By Oil Spills and Such Limit The Fresh Water Sources For Peacocks Causing Them To Die Off. Hunting Animals That Peacocks Eat Is A Major Human Activity Negatively Affecting The Life Of Peacocks As Well. Most Of The Things That Humans Do To These Forests Don't Only Affect The Peacock Population, But Other Animals That May Live In These Forests.
Symbiotic Relationships Parasitism: Fleas Harm Peacocks, By Biting Their Skin, Sucking Their Blood, and Causing Them To Itch. The Fleas Get Food and A Warm Home, While The Peacocks Are Somewhat Tortured. Mutualism: The Peacock Has A Mutual Symbiotic Relationship With The Intestinal Flora. The Flora Helps Break Down The Foods The Peacock Eats To Help Digest Them. The Flora Are Fed and Housed By This. Commensalism: Burdocks Are Weeds. Their Seeds Have Spines That Will Allow Them To Be Picked Up In The Fur Of Peacocks Passing By.
Innate Behaivors 1) When Baby Peacocks Open Their Mouths Wide, The Mother Instinctively Feeds Them. 2) If An Egg Rolls Out Of The Nest, A Mother Peacock Uses Her Beak To Push It Back Into The Nest. Returning The Egg To The Nest Helps Ensure That The Egg Will Hatch.