Temporal Isolation
Temporal isolation is a prezygotic constraints. Two species that breed at different times of the day, season, or year cannot mix their gametes. Since the breeding times are different there is no chance of reproductive contact. This keeps different species separate.
Over billions and billions of years, an entire species slowly develops characteristics that they need to adapt to current conditions. If this is repeated enough times, a new species completely different from the original can "form". Or if you're really religious, your God makes new species or whatever.
The three types of reproductive isolation are: 1. Temporal isolation: different times of reproduction 2. Behavioral isolation: different habits of the same species 3. Geographical isolation: species are separated by natural barriers
Gene Flow ~
A native tree of New Zealand that has pendulous (they hang below the branch) yellow flowers is the Kowhai or Sophora.
Temporal Isolation
the intrinsic rate of increase is the rate at which a population would grow if it had unlimited resources. generally, a population with a high intrinsic rate of increase will reproduce early in life, have short generation times, can reproduce many times, and have many offspring every time they reproduce.
They don't reproduce at the same rate because some get damaged at different times then the other cells
Some different words are: Times, product, factor, compound and reproduce. Sorry that's all I can think of but I :)
At least once a year is the number of times that a grasshopper can reproduce. The answer may vary depending upon location and species. For example, red-legged grasshoppers (Melanoplus femurrubrum) tend annually to mate twice in the southern United States and even three times in Florida.
The answer to this question depends on what species of fish you are specifically asking about. The record for swordtails is 300, but whilst this seems like a large amount, keep in consideration that is a humongous accomplishment if even 20 percent of the eggs survive. Other species, such as the cardinal tetra, rarely breed in captivity, so you should not keep your hopes up for them. One species that rapidly and frequently breeds is the guppy. Guppies may leave you wishing you had not chosen to breed them in the first place. You should probably expect at least fifty or so eggs, and don't be crushed if all of the eggs don't survive. Like I mentioned earlier, even twenty percent of survivors is quite an amazing feat.
No, early humans were not all one species. There were multiple species of early humans that existed simultaneously, such as Homo habilis, Homo erectus, and Neanderthals, among others. These different species had distinct features and characteristics.
It depends on what kind of fish they are; tropical fish will reproduce many times in a year, whereas many temperate species will only do so once a year.
Depending on the size and species, a female snake can lay between tens and thousands of eggs in its lifetime. Pit vipers bear live young, and have comparatively fewer than oviparous (egg-laying) species.
Temporal isolation: Individuals do not mate because they are active at different times. This may be different times of the day or different seasons. The species mating periods may not match up. Individuals do not encounter one another during either their mating periods, or at all. Source:Wikipedia: Isolating mechanisms
Different species bloom at different times, some bloom in the spring, some in the summer. Some species bloom only at night, others during the day.
Temporal isolation is a prezygotic constraints. Two species that breed at different times of the day, season, or year cannot mix their gametes. Since the breeding times are different there is no chance of reproductive contact. This keeps different species separate.