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andreyandreev [35.5K]
3 years ago
13

Which activity can strengthen a diverse family?

Advanced Placement (AP)
2 answers:
romanna [79]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

B) all family members following family rituals

Explanation:

A) children playing competitive sports

If the children are forced, which sometimes happen, it does not make the family stronger.

B) all family members following family rituals

This is something that the entire family is going to do together, so yes, it does strenghten the family. This is the correct answer.

C) family members planning weekend activities individually

If each one does things individually, it does not strengthen the family.

D) parents practicing authority over children

The parents should educate the children, yes, but when there is no fun, no care, just authority, so just parents practing authority is not enough strenghten the family.

E) encouraging all family members to be materialistic

It is good to have the newest cell-phone or videogame, but if this is the "reason" of your life, it is not going to strengthen the family.

butalik [34]3 years ago
5 0
Parents practicing authority over children
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Those in developing countries dont have the monetary resources to provide other domestic services, so they rely heavy on imports and exports. Potato products to a feveloping country may be its main source of income, and if eradicated, could leave a domino effect on the country's overall economy. If the demand from that country increases, the developing country now has the financial ability to increase production throuhg the use of purchasing larger farms, newer equiptment, and push conservation efforts. An increased demand in a countrys product also drives up the price, if that company cannto keep up with a higher output.

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Introduction
A central problem in ecology is to understand the patterns and processes shaping the distribution of species. There is a preponderance of studies of species richness at broad geographic scales (Hawkins et al. 2003, Rahbek et al. 2007, Stein et al. 2014, Rabosky and Hurlbert 2015) that has facilitated our understanding of why species are found where they are, a central tenet within the domain of ecology (Scheiner and Willig 2008). Most commonly, these studies find species distributions to be correlated with resource availability and use environmental variables (e.g. temperature and productivity; Rabosky and Hurlbert 2015) to explain putative determinants of the distributions. Environmental variables are only one determinant of species’ distributions. Another, species interaction, is a key and understudied determinant of species’ distributions (Cazelles et al. 2016). In fact, in some cases species interactions may be more important for determining distribution than environmental variables (Fleming 2005).

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