<span>The answer to this question would be Binge Eating Disorder.
Binge eating disorder and bulimia seem to be similar because the person will eat so much food. But the thing that makes it differ with bulimia nervosa is that binge eating disorder doesn't attempt to put out the food by inducing throw up.
Anorexia is the opposite of those where the person is avoiding eat.</span>
PRO: Quadrats work well for observing changes to whole populations over time, including distribution patterns, nesting and overall health. Some study techniques do not work with quadrats, however. For example, capture-recapture techniques that allow researchers to study individual animals do not work with quadrats because even slow-moving animals can move out of the study boundaries between sample periods.
CON: Despite the relative ease of designing quadrat studies, it is possible to introduce errors into a project. Quadrats that are too large, too small or spaced inappropriately often result in errors. For example, larger species require larger plots. Randomly spaced quadrats that are too small might miss too many individuals, resulting in under-representative estimates of population size.
This is most likely the result of OXIDATION. When an apple is cut open, the cells of the apple are exposed to the atmosphere, the in built defense mechanism inside the apple that is supervised by certain enzymes react to this situation by reacting with oxygen and creating an oxidized brown layer which protects the apple from foreign bodies.
If t<span>he maximum number of emu that the environment can support is approximately sixty due to limited resources such as food and water. </span><span>The correct answer for the question the carrying capacity of the emu population is sixty. </span>
I think the correct answer would be that all animals have evolutionary relationships. These relationships are found by analyzing or are determined by the genomes, morphological traits, genes, coding of the genes and the like. Hope this answers the question.