Food, Space and water
Both the limiting factor and carrying capacity play a role in determining the maximum population size an environment can support. Limiting factors are characteristics of the environment that restrict population growth, while carrying capacity is the maximum population size an environment can sustain over the long term. Both are important concepts in population ecology.
Humans are able to use their knowledge to locate resources they need.
If a population grows larger than the carrying capacity, there will likely be increased competition for resources such as food, water, and space. This can lead to food scarcity, increased stress, and potentially higher mortality rates within the population. Over time, the population size may decrease as individuals struggle to survive in the limited environment.
The three most direct factors that affect the population a region can support over time are availability of resources (such as food, water, and shelter), infrastructure and services (like healthcare and transportation), and environmental conditions (such as climate and natural disasters).
Food, Space and water
Food, space, and water
No, individuals do not only care about things that directly affect them. Many people care about issues that impact others, society as a whole, or the environment, even if they are not directly affected.
It depends on what the carrying capacity is plotted against.
yes it does and these limiting enviromental things are called limiting factors and they are all animals need lots of this so ecosystems limit these things especially with pollution, factories, machiens, buildings and homes Food Shelter Water space
Both the limiting factor and carrying capacity play a role in determining the maximum population size an environment can support. Limiting factors are characteristics of the environment that restrict population growth, while carrying capacity is the maximum population size an environment can sustain over the long term. Both are important concepts in population ecology.
No, carrying heavy things does not make you shorter.
If there is too many organisms living in an ecosystem then the ecosystem will hit it's carrying capacity and bottom out. Meaning there could be no resources (food, water, shelter) and all of the organisms that can't find these things due to being weaker than the others will die, until the ecosystem is under the carrying capacity.
Food, space, and water
Current Capacity of a conductor depends on may things, and not only its size and material. Also important are the conditions in which it will be used, the allowable temperature increase and acceptable voltage drop. Measuring the current carrying capacity would involve measuring all those variables under load.
Carrying backpacks are helpful because you can put your things in it instead of carrying them by hand. your hand would eventually hurt if you have to carry a lot of things.
The current-carrying capacity of a cable depends on a number of things in addition to its cross-sectional area; these include the type of conductor, number of cores, type of insulation, whether or not it is armoured, method of installation, etc. Accordingly, to determine its current-carrying capacity, you will need to refer to your national electrical code. For example, in the UK, BS 7671:2008 Requirements for Electrical Installations contains tables for all standard cable types, specifying current-carrying capacity, voltage drops, etc.