it is a k
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Yes.
Almost all insects are r-strategists - they reproduce rapidly and in high numbers when conditions are favourable. Other r-strategists include rodents and bacteria. K-species are very different, they usually have one offspring which they invest a lot of parental time/care into. Examples of this include humans and elephants.
An organism.
Flamingos are K-strategists
no it is a k-strategist
Most organisms lie on a continuum between r-strategists and K-strategists, and the octopus is one of those. The octopus lays a lot of eggs, typical of an r-strategist, but also invests parental care into its offspring, typical of a K-strategist.
Bees are not R-strategist. Bees are considered to be K-strategist because they live in stable environments and produce few offspring.
Ecologically, a 'K' strategist is an organism that produces fewer offspring over its lifetime, but invests greater resources in those offspring. This produces a population that tends to fluctuate little over time. It is considered the ecological opposite of an 'r' strategist.
A K strategist or K species are animals with few, and often large offspring. The nurture and protect their young, reproduce later in life, live long, and population size is stable and near carrying capacity. Examples are elephants, humans, etc... A R strategist is something like insects and weeds.
A species characterized by having rapid development, high motility, and a high reproductive rate relative to a K-strategist.
An r-strategist because r-strategists are small, have a shorter life span, and have many offspring. Examples would be spiders, mice, fish, bugs, ect.
k-Strategist but act like r-Strategists in many such as expansion.
it is a k
Yes, they are. K-strategists nurture their young, have a small amount of babies with a high survival rate.
The elephants are k-strategist particular iteroparous~Daniel oyeniran