Food, water, and Natural Resources are the most common examples of density-dependent factors.
yes
A density dependent factor is a factor that is affected by the amount of organisms in a population. An example of this would be sickness, as the higher the density is, the more easily the sickness will spread.
Bacteria and other parasites are density dependent. For example, tuberculosis which is caused by a bacteria that is spread through the air when someone who is infected sneezes or coughs, and it infects a higher percentage of people in high-density cities than in rural areas.
Disease is Density dependent.
Density Dependent
Limiting factors whose effects increase as the size of the population increases are known as density-dependent factors. Competition is an example of a density-dependent limiting factor.
density independent or density dependent?Intense Competitonn For A Food Source
Mass and volume are density dependent factors food supply
Space and food sources are density-dependent factors.
density dependent
density dependent
Density-dependent factors are factors that limit population growth such as, a natural disaster, disease, drought, fire, etc.May I add, food supply also falls under the density-dependent factor that involves population growth. When this happens, population does not level off but usually plunges down. In the factor of disease, an example would be the Great Black Plegue in England. It wiped out many people in just weeks.