Across
- 2. Wild animals do not want to be around humans. Domestic animals are more tame.
- 3. an extinct bovine mammal of northern Africa, Europe and western Asia, believed to be the forerunner of domestic cattle
- 6. Wild animals provide their own subsistence. Predators must hunt their own food, and foragers move to find suitable lands for grazing. Domestic animals rely on their caretaker to provide their feed.
- 8. an animal that preys on others
- 9. a group of animals or plants within a species having a distinctive appearance and typically having been developed by deliberate selection
- 10. to breed a population of animals or plants to serve the purposes of human beings and to need and accept human care
- 12. animal an animal that provides for its own food, shelter, and other needs
- 13. animal waste used for fertilizing land
Down
- 1. any material of natural or synthetic origin that is applied to soils or plant tissues to supply one or more nutrients essential to plant growth
- 3. Domestic animals develop a different appearance than their wild ancestors. This takes place due to selective breeding. (For example a wild boar and domestic farm pig look similar in structure, but have changed significantly in domestication) Wild animals maintain the characteristics needed for survival
- 4. Wild animals reproduce by the principle of "survival of the fittest." The reproduction of domestic animals is controlled by their caretaker who identifies ideal characteristics they would like in their offspring and selectively breeds animals with those characteristics.
- 5. a group of cattle or other domestic animals of a single kind that are kept together for a specific use
- 7. a person, plant, or animal that is descended from a particular ancestor
- 11. breeding process by which humans control the breeding of plants or animals in order to exhibit or eliminate a particular characteristic
