Title: Explain how do you determine when carrying capacity has been reached for a pop Post by: CINDYLOUELLA on Nov 20, 2014 How do the population numbers for these organisms compare when they are grown individually versus when they were grown together? Suggest an explanation for any differences
Title: Re: Explain how do you determine when carrying capacity has been reached for a pop Post by: jjooaannaa on Nov 28, 2014 CAN SOMEONE HELP ME WITH THIS QUESTIONS?? THANK YOU
If all organisms originated in their present forms during a single event, Darwin wondered, why was there a distinctive clustering of similar organisms in different regions of the world? Why were all types of organisms not randomly distributed? Why would living and fossilized organisms that looked similar be found within the same region? Why did the Galápagos species so closely resemble organisms on the adjacent South American coastline? Why was there such a diversity of species in such a small area? Could these species have been modified from an ancestral form that arrived on the Galápagos Islands shortly after the islands were formed?CAN SOMEONE HELP ME WITH THIS QUESTIONS?? THANK YOU If all organisms originated in their present forms during a single event, Darwin wondered, why was there a distinctive clustering of similar organisms in different regions of the world? Why were all types of organisms not randomly distributed? Why would living and fossilized organisms that looked similar be found within the same region? Why did the Galápagos species so closely resemble organisms on the adjacent South American coastline? Why was there such a diversity of species in such a small area? Could these species have been modified from an ancestral form that arrived on the Galápagos Islands shortly after the islands were formed? Title: Re: Explain how do you determine when carrying capacity has been reached for a pop Post by: padre on Dec 19, 2014 Why did the Galápagos species so closely resemble organisms on the adjacent South American coastline? Guessing due to Continental drift. This PowerPoint will help you! |