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7dog47 7dog47
wrote...
Posts: 15
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9 years ago
1. Factors that affect population growth are:
   a) only biotic factors
   b) biogeochemical cycles
   c) only abiotic factors
   d) both biotic and abiotic factors

* I think its d*

2. The highest possible cgr (per capita growth rate) for a population is called its biotic potential. All of the fowlling factors determine a species biotic potential (r) except the  number of:
   a) times individuals reproduce in a life span
   b) offspring per reproductive cycle
   c) high frequency of dominant alleles in the population
   d) off spring that survive and reproduce
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Replies
wrote...
9 years ago
1. d is correct.
2. c. The dominant alleles do not affect population growth, only genetic traits.
rsb
wrote...
9 years ago
1. Factors that affect population growth are:
   a) only biotic factors
   b) biogeochemical cycles
   c) only abiotic factors
   d) both biotic and abiotic factors

* I think its d*

If believe you're correct.

2. The highest possible cgr (per capita growth rate) for a population is called its biotic potential. All of the fowlling factors determine a species biotic potential (r) except the  number of:
   a) times individuals reproduce in a life span
   b) offspring per reproductive cycle
   c) high frequency of dominant alleles in the population
   d) off spring that survive and reproduce

The population growth rate measures how populations change in size over time. The units of population growth rate are individuals per time. Population size can only be changed by four factors. Births add new individuals to a population whereas deaths remove individuals from a population. Similarly, immigration into a population adds new individuals whereas emigration out of a population removes individuals. Population growth rates are positive when more individuals are added to a population than are removed, negative when more individuals are removed than are added, and are equal to zero when an equal number of individuals are added and removed. This population size is known as the carrying capacity and is the size beyond which no significant increase can occur due to limitations of some type, e.g., food, water, sunlight, space.
Source  http://www.eoearth.org/view/article/155312/
7dog47 Author
wrote...
9 years ago
Thank you both for your help Slight Smile
wrote...
9 years ago
This is under the same topic.
Does anyone know the answer to this question?

The carrying capacity of the environment is related to factors affecting population growth such as

a. availability of water and oxygen, temperature, and relative humidity
b. only very small changes in the frequency of alleles from one generation to the next generation
c. the ratio of the earth's land surface to the volume of the aquatic environment
d. availability of resources, disease, competition and predation
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