Answer:
- Eating different vegetables.
- Eating at different times.
- Eating in different places in the same region.
Explanation:
It is common for herbivorous animals of different species to share the ecological niche and the same habitat without establishing competition for resources. In this case, these animals manage to maintain a balance between their populations and the resources available for both species to survive. Three ways of doing this are:
- Feeding on different vegetables: Even though they are herbivores, some animals prefer a specific type of vegetable, or just feed on these vegetables. We can use as an example animals that eat only fruits and animals that eat only herbs.
- Eating at different times: Some animals have nocturnal habits, while others have diurnal habits. This is very efficient so that these animals are not competitors and are able to feed at different times
- Eating in different places in the same region: We can use as an example two species of turtles, where one lives on the south side of the region and feeds on the vegetables found there, while the other species lives on the north side of the region and feeds on vegetables found there.
The enzymes that digest carbohydrates are very specific and can only digest specific glucose monomers of a Polysaccharides. For example our body can digest starch since its made up of α-glucose monomers (the difference of α-glucose and β-glucose is just on the location of the hydroxl group). However <span>Polysaccharides</span> like cellulose are indigestible because cellulose is made up of β-glucose and the enzyme which digests polysaccharides in humans (amylase) cannot detect β-glucose linkages.
I think that the answer is d