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ale4655 [162]
3 years ago
7

Physical limiting factors of an ecosystem are such things as?

Biology
2 answers:
devlian [24]3 years ago
8 0
The limiting factors of an ecosystem are Habitat, Space, Resource abundance, or the reproductions<span />
nataly862011 [7]3 years ago
5 0
An example: There is a population of rabbits. A population of foxes eat these rabbits. The adding number of foxes depends of the adding number of available prey, in this case the rabbits. If there is a decrease in the number of rabbits, there will also be aa decrease in the number of foxes. This all happens because the foxes have to little rabbits to eat to survive. Rabbits are in this case the limiting factor for the growth of the population of foxes.

Shown above: an example of a biotic (physical) limiting factor.

(Biotic (physical) environmental factors in an ecosystem, the organisms of other species can influence the life and the population of a species)
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8. Which zone contains floodplains in a strcam system?
Vikentia [17]

Does this help?

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5 0
3 years ago
59:10 A chemical has been found to harm the same components in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Which components are those
MrMuchimi
DNA, cell membrane, cytoplasm, and ribosomes.

Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells have structures in common. All cells have a cell membrane, ribosomes, cytoplasm, and DNA. The cell membrane, or plasma membrane, is the phospholipid layer that surrounds the cell and protects it from the outside environment.

7 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Where can you observe environmental changes that are forcing adaptation?
Helen [10]

Answer:

Description

Since its inception, life on earth has had to adapt to changing environmental conditions - this represents a driving force of evolution.

This module examines how organisms detect and respond to changes in their environment, and reviews the different behavioural, physiological and molecular mechanisms underpinning environmental (stress) adaptation.

Understanding these organism-environment interactions forms the very foundations of ecology. Examples are provided from a range of organisms, but a specific focus is given to terrestrial invertebrates (insects) and plants.

The term “environment” covers a broad spectrum of spatial scales, from changes occurring at the cellular level, to large scale geographic differences between major climatic zones (polar, temperate and tropical).

The process of “change”, and adaptation to these changes, will in turn be discussed across a broad spectrum of timescales. These include:

The requirement for rapid adaptation to potentially dramatic shifts in environmental conditions, e.g. when a parasite first enters its host

Longer-term changes and adaptations across seasonal timescales, e.g. hibernation/insect diapause

Adaptation on an evolutionary timescale, e.g. the ‘Red Queen’ hypothesis, across scenarios of past environmental changes, and extending out to current predictive climate change models

The main aims of this module are to provide students with information, guidance, and access to resources, that will allow them to:

Gain an in depth understanding of how organisms respond and adapt to changes in their environment.

Recognize that the term “environment” covers a continuum of spatial scales from molecular environments within cells, to broad-scale geographic environments and climatic zones.

Appreciate that adaptation to environmental change for an individual organism is transient and occurs across a temporal spectrum of seconds to seasons. For species, adaptation is long-term, but not fixed/permanent, and occurs across a timescale of generations.

Interpret the potential impact of climate change on species, communities and ecosystems. Specifically with respect to how the rate of environmental change may limit effective adaptation, and so result in changes in species distribution and abundance patterns

Become effective independent learners, capable of analysing and interpreting the scientific literature to help formulate and express their own ideas

Explanation:

hope it help to you read rhis to answer your question po

7 0
3 years ago
Thinking creatively about evolutionary mechanisms, identify at least two schemes that could generate allelic polymorphism in a p
Ede4ka [16]

Complete question:

Thinking creatively about evolutionary mechanisms, identify at least

two schemes that could generate allelic polymorphism in a population except natural selection that favors heterozygotes.

<u>Select the two correct answers.</u>

-inbreeding among individuals in the population

-purifying selection against mutational variants of alleles in the population

-continuous migration of individuals with new alleles into the population

-mutations that do not severely affect viability and reproductivity

-genetic drift of alleles common in the population

-events leading to genetic bottleneck effect

Answer:

The two events that might favor heterozygotes among the options are  

  • The Continuous migration of individuals with new alleles into the population
  • Mutations that do not severely affect viability and reproductivity.  These might favor heterozygous frequencies.

Explanation:

Due to technical problems, you will find the complete explanation in the attached files.

Download pdf
3 0
3 years ago
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