individuals an ecosystem can support.
the difference between limiting factor and carrying capacity is the fact that carrying capacity is the population a ecosystem can support over TIME and limiting factor just makes the population stop growing and wont let any more people/animals/ect.. in if the place is packed
The buffer capacity increases as the concentration of the buffer solution increases and is a maximum when the pH is equal to the same value as the pKa of the weak acid in the buffer. A buffer solution is a good buffer in the pH range that is + or - 1 pH unit of the pKa. Beyond that, buffering capacity is minimal.
Mostly because of high winds, low soil moisture, and cold temperatures.
When a pendulum reaches its maximum elongation the velocity is zero and the acceleration is maximum
It is true. The book says "The maximum distance a signal can travel and still be interpreted accurately is equal to a segment's maximum length. Beyond this length, data loss is apt to occur."
Carrying capacity
individuals an ecosystem can support.
Carrying capacity
the largest population that can be supported
The maximum population that an ecosystem can maintain.
12 swg current carrying capacity
The maximum rate of increase of a population is its biotic potential, which represents the highest possible growth rate under ideal conditions, unaffected by environmental factors such as resource availability or competition.
The maximum population size a habitat can support is determined by its carrying capacity, which is the maximum population size that can be sustained by the available resources and environmental conditions. The carrying capacity can be influenced by factors such as food availability, space, disease, competition for resources, and environmental quality.
350kg
carrying capacity
The answer is carrying capacity.
Every ecosystem has a carrying capacity, which is the maximum number of organisms that particular ecosystem can sustain for an indefinite period of time. The precise number of organisms varies with the ecosystem, for example a rain-forest could sustain more animals that a desert of the same size, though it's really hard to predict an exact number. The number of organisms living in an ecosystem will constantly change due to death, birth, immigration and emigration, so the number of animals living in an ecosystem can shift higher or lower than the maximum carrying capacity. Although, generally, if it is higher than the carrying capacity, animals will either die as the ecosystem cannot support them, or emigrate to somewhere new, depending on the habits of that particular organism. Hope this helps!