im not sure..i dont know the answer either
Factors such as availability of resources, predation, competition with other species, disease, and environmental conditions can control the growth or survival of a population. These factors can influence birth rates, death rates, and overall population dynamics.
This could be anything, from earthquakes to migration to floods to disease, and so on, and so forth. In nature, population sizes naturally fluctuate even without such events, due to changes in the availability of resources, predation, and so on.
Nonliving factors in a biome, also known as abiotic factors, include climate, soil composition, topography, sunlight availability, water availability, and natural disasters. These factors influence the distribution and abundance of living organisms within a biome.
Natural disasters, such as hurricanes or fires, are considered density-independent limiting factors because their impact on a population does not depend on the population's size or density. Instead, these factors affect a population regardless of its size.
Population change over time occurs due to a combination of factors such as births, deaths, migration, and natural disasters. These factors influence the growth or decline of a population, resulting in shifts in demographics and population size. Understanding patterns of population change is important for policymakers to plan for future resource allocation and infrastructure development.
# Access to food. # Access to work. # Access to medical help. # Peace/War # Natural disasters #Technology
Natural disasters are typically considered independent limiting factors. They occur regardless of the population size or density, influencing ecosystems and species by causing sudden changes in habitat and resource availability. Unlike dependent limiting factors, such as food supply or disease, which are affected by the population size, natural disasters can impact populations directly and dramatically, independent of their current state.
predation, availability of food, disease, parasitism Things that depend on the size of the population, as opposed to density independent factors such as weather, and natural disasters.
Most likely but I am quite sure that they are advancing their technology to prevent future disasters.
Carrying capacity is determined by factors like availability of resources, space, and environmental conditions that limit the maximum population an area can support. It is regulated by factors such as food availability, predation, competition for resources, disease, and natural disasters that can limit population growth and prevent it from exceeding the carrying capacity. Population size may fluctuate as these factors change over time.
The answer is Yes.
Events like natural disasters, habitat destruction, depletion of resources, and disease outbreaks are likely to contribute to lowering the carrying capacity of a population. These events can reduce the availability of food, water, shelter, and other necessary resources for the population, leading to a decline in the population's ability to sustain itself at previous levels.
Mass extinction
Factors such as availability of resources, predation, competition with other species, disease, and environmental conditions can control the growth or survival of a population. These factors can influence birth rates, death rates, and overall population dynamics.
Areas that are prone to natural disasters limit the space that population can spread to. Nevertheless, such areas are becoming settled, despite the economic and health hazards of living in disaster-prone areas.
1.Hurricane disasters 2.Tornado disasters 3.Earthquake disasters 4.Bomb explosions 5.Death 6.Fire 7.Killing 8.Cancer
Because of earthquakes, and natural disasters that have occured over time.