type III
Many fish species and other species that have many offspring at once exhibit type the III survivorship curve, because most die early in life. Few live to old age, but most that survive their youth will live a long life. The organisms that exhibit this type of survivorship curve are typically r strategists, so they provide little to no parental care for their offspring, which makes it harder for them to survive, especially in the unusually unstable environments in which they may live.
primary tissue types that exhibit cellularity
Viscous
Bilateral Symmetry
and it is (D)
Seagulls and other birds
Type I survivorship curve
Type 1 = high survivorship when young, and low at old age
Type 1
Type I
A type 2 survivorship curve implies a roughly constant mortality rate across all age groups of the species.
Type II
type 1 is what it seems like but its type 2
Many fish species and other species that have many offspring at once exhibit type the III survivorship curve, because most die early in life. Few live to old age, but most that survive their youth will live a long life. The organisms that exhibit this type of survivorship curve are typically r strategists, so they provide little to no parental care for their offspring, which makes it harder for them to survive, especially in the unusually unstable environments in which they may live.
Chimpanzees are Type I organisms, and have cucarachas in thier pants.
few offspring and good parental care
a Type III curve -The greatest mortality is experienced early on in life, with relatively low rates of death for those surviving this bottleneck. This type of curve is characteristic of species that produce a large number of offspring