A Specialist is someone who is an expertise in a certain field. Example: A Doctor Who specializes in ADHD. He has a tremendous amount of knowledge and education on that one area.
A Generalist has a broad range of knowledge and education over several areas.
A specialist predator feeds ona specific type of prey. For example, the numbat of Australia lives within a limited range of far western Australia, and feeds almost exclusively on termites.
A generalist predator has a much wider variety of prey. For example, a raccoon can adapt to a variety of habitats, feeding on insects, small mammals and birds, and eggs.
A specialist is a species which survives on a fairly limited diet (e.g. koalas, which feed almost exclusively on certain species of eucalyptus leaves) or is restricted to a particular locality (such as the tuatara of New Zealand, a species found in only a few offshore islands of the country).
Generalists are species which can survive in a wide variety of habitats, or feed on a range of different foods (e.g. the Virginia opossum, or the wild rabbit).
Behavioral and physiological adaptations are two characteristics of generalist species. A generalist species can adapt to different environments and resources. Animals that are omnivores are often generalists species.
The chromosomes in a pair carry the same genes in the same places. There are different versions of the same gene. These different versions of the same gene are called alleles.
Isotopes are different forms of the same element which have different numbers of neutrons in their atomic nuclei. A given element is identified by the number of protons in its nucleus; that's its atomic number. Two different isotopes of the same element have the same number of protons, but each has a different number of neutrons in its nucleus. Different isotopes of the same element are chemically the same.
Yes the word specialist is a noun. It is a common noun.
Yes, different isotopes of the same element have different masses.
There are many different kinds of research and many different kinds of researcher, so the answer is that a researcher can be either a specialist or a generalist, depending upon the type of research.
A lion is not a generalist, but is classified as a specialist. The lion is a specialist as it depends on a certain diet and environment in order to thrive and survive.
A lion is not a generalist, but is classified as a specialist. The lion is a specialist as it depends on a certain diet and environment in order to thrive and survive.
A crane is a generalist. A generalist is a species which can survive in a variety of environments, on a range of different food types. Cranes are found almost all over the world, and their diet is fairly wide-ranging, so this is what makes it a generalist.
A Specialist has a narrow ecological niche whereas, a generalist can live in a wide variety of environmental conditions.
The White Spruce is a generalist as it can withstand a variety of lighting and soil conditions.
thanks you
bureaucrats are generalist or specialist
generalist
The tuatara, a highly endangered lizard of New Zealand, is a specialist. A specialist is a species which survives on a fairly limited diet or is restricted to a particular locality. The tuatara is a species found in only a few offshore islands of the New Zealand, and it is particularly vulnerable to habitat loss. This makes it a specialist.
A specialist studies or works in the field of a specific thing (Ex, a human specialist, specializes in humans which are mammals), and a generalist studies a range of more than one specific breed or type (Ex a generalist on mammals studies all mammals, not just one specifically). Hope that's what you were looking for. Good luck!
A generalist is a jack-of-all-trades but a master of none __________________________________________________________________ The opposite of specialist, a generalist is said to have knowledge like the Mississippi; a mile wide, but only an inch thick.