Biotic potential refers to the maximum reproductive capacity of an organism under ideal conditions, while environmental resistance encompasses the factors that limit population growth, such as food scarcity, predation, disease, and habitat constraints. The interaction between these two concepts determines the carrying capacity of an environment, as high biotic potential can lead to rapid population growth, but environmental resistance will eventually slow that growth and stabilize the population size. This dynamic balance influences ecosystem stability and biodiversity.
actual capacity - potential capacity multiplied by 100
RESISTANce
Factors such as availability of resources, competition for resources, predation, disease, and environmental conditions can all help stabilize a population and its carrying capacity. These factors work together to regulate population size by balancing birth rates and death rates within the ecosystem. When these factors are in balance, the population is able to stabilize around the carrying capacity of the environment.
carrying capacity is the largest number of individuals of one species that an environment can support. Biotic potential is the potential growth of a population if it could grow in perfect conditions with no limiting factors.
The S curve represents the result of environmental resistance. The research compares the population size to the time in which it took for environment to be effected.
Heat Capacity
Reproductive capacity is defined as a measure of the capacity of a species to reproduce itself under optimum conditions. For example, the reproductive capacity of a human would be a single child (or multiples) every 10 to 12 months for approximately 30 active reproductive years.
Heat Capacity
Potential - Having or showing the capacity to develop into something in the future.
The capacity of energy to do work is known as its potential energy.
The carrying capacity of an ecosystem is influenced by factors such as the availability of resources like food and shelter, the presence of predators or competitors, disease, environmental conditions like climate and habitat quality, and human impacts such as pollution and habitat destruction. These factors can impact the ability of an ecosystem to support a certain population size over time.