equilibrium
What happens if over populated
I think it will be the primary consumers since they cant eat any grass?
Every ecosystem has a carrying capacity, which is the maximum number of organisms that particular ecosystem can sustain for an indefinite period of time. The precise number of organisms varies with the ecosystem, for example a rain-forest could sustain more animals that a desert of the same size, though it's really hard to predict an exact number. The number of organisms living in an ecosystem will constantly change due to death, birth, immigration and emigration, so the number of animals living in an ecosystem can shift higher or lower than the maximum carrying capacity. Although, generally, if it is higher than the carrying capacity, animals will either die as the ecosystem cannot support them, or emigrate to somewhere new, depending on the habits of that particular organism. Hope this helps!
Biodiversity is the measure of the number of species living within an ecosystem.
Any number of plants are part of a pond ecosystem: duckweed and frogbit,hornwort, Canadian pondweed, water lilies, bur-reed, water plantain, reedmace plus others.
- The organisms have to fit into the energy pyramid- The largest number of organism in any ecosystem needs to be the producers- The smallest number of organism need to be the highest level of consumers in that ecosystem
What happens if over populated
number of resources is usually the same
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The destruction of natural resources in living organisms can have a negative effect on the ecosystem. destroying the environment where an organism lives can reduce the number of organisms in the area.
I think it will be the primary consumers since they cant eat any grass?
There is no certain number of habitats in an ecosystem because it depends on the number of organisms living in that ecosystem.
A population in a community means the specific kind of organism (plants and animals) living in a community (all the living things in an ecosystem)
Every ecosystem has a carrying capacity, which is the maximum number of organisms that particular ecosystem can sustain for an indefinite period of time. The precise number of organisms varies with the ecosystem, for example a rain-forest could sustain more animals that a desert of the same size, though it's really hard to predict an exact number. The number of organisms living in an ecosystem will constantly change due to death, birth, immigration and emigration, so the number of animals living in an ecosystem can shift higher or lower than the maximum carrying capacity. Although, generally, if it is higher than the carrying capacity, animals will either die as the ecosystem cannot support them, or emigrate to somewhere new, depending on the habits of that particular organism. Hope this helps!
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Biodiversity is the measure of the number of species living within an ecosystem.
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