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One part is called the carrying capacity. which is the population size that an enviroment can hod.
A growth curve is a chart model showing the growth and evolution of an entity over time. A population growth curve charts the growth of a population over a certain amount of time.
A population's growth curve most closely resembles an "S" shaped curve, known as the logistic growth curve. Initially, the curve rises slowly as the population grows, followed by a period of rapid growth, before leveling off as the environment's carrying capacity is reached and growth stabilizes.
population growth begins to slow down
A logistic growth curve plots the number of organisms in a growing population over time. Initially, the curve shows exponential growth until reaching the carrying capacity, where population growth levels off due to limited resources. This curve is commonly used in ecology to model population dynamics.
example of a J-curve population in nature? Explain.
I think the answer is realized growth because it also includes the effect of environmental resistance and causes it to become S shaped unlike the theoretical growth curve.
a population thing
Logistic Growth
An S-shaped curve for population growth suggests that the population initially grows slowly, accelerates rapidly, and then levels off as it reaches carrying capacity. This pattern is indicative of logistic growth, where resource limitations eventually constrain population growth.
logistic growth
Logistic growth