subject
Biology, 04.12.2019 06:31 Christalex9874

Why is there a trade-off between survivorship and fecundity?

a. fitness trade-offs occur because fecundity is higher in young organisms and survivorship is higher in older organisms.

b. resources such as time and energy are limited, so survivorship and fecundity cannot both be maximized simultaneously.

c. life history is shaped by natural selection in a way that maximizes survivorship and fecundity.

d. fecundity depends on survivorship. if survivorship is increasing, the fecundity also will be increasing.

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on Biology

question
Biology, 21.06.2019 18:30
Asap timed! 1. ice core samples from glaciers ice caps contain bubbles of ancient atmosphere that are in layers based on age. what questions are scientists most interested in? a. how the amount of water vapor needed to make the ice has changed b. how the amount of ozone has changed over time.c. how the amount of ice in each layer has changed over time d. how the amount of carbon dioxide has changed over time 2. what produces milankovich cycles ? a. sunspots ams solar flare on the suns surface b. changes in the earths orbit c. gravitational changes bases on the position of the sun and the moond. cycles of vegetation that result in desert and rainforest conditions
Answers: 1
question
Biology, 22.06.2019 00:30
Experiments in environmental toxicology can sometimes be manipulative experiments in which the researcher actively chooses and manipulates the independent variable. in hunt's study, for example, dosages of bpa were manipulated and the effects were measured. in manipulative studies, the researcher controls all the other variables in the experiment, so any health effects observed in the test subjects can be attributed to differences in the independent variable. in other cases, researchers use natural experiments in which the dependent variable (typically a measure of organism health) is measured under differing contexts that are not manipulated. say, for example, that an accidental chemical spill contaminates five ponds. to determine the possible effects of the toxic chemical on frogs, a researcher could compare the hatching rate of frog eggs laid in those five ponds to the hatching rate of eggs laid in five uncontaminated ponds nearby. this would be an example of a natural experiment because concentrations of the toxic chemical in the ponds were not controlled by the experimenter, but rather resulted from the chemical spill. drag type of experiment on the left to the example of experiment on the right. blood concentrations of bpa in college students are compared to their recent manipulative consumption of canned food items 2. the feeding behavior of fish in streams that receive acidic runoff from strip mines is compared to the feeding behavior of fish in unaffected streams. the deformity rate in baby birds from nests in pesticide-sprayed fields is compared to the deformity rate in birds from nests in unsprayed fields 4 tumor development is compared in mice exposed to five dosages of a known carcinogen in the laboratory foraging activity levels are compared in tadpoles exposed to four concentrations of toxic metals in the laboratory. growth of corn plants is compared in field plots sprayed with three different dosage: s of weed killer 7 bpa concentrations in the urine of people with diabetes are compared to bpa concentrations in the urine of people without diabetes - natural; manipulative
Answers: 1
question
Biology, 22.06.2019 01:50
Sperm pass through the and connect to a short ejaculatory duct. vas deferens prostrates seminiferous tubules none of the above
Answers: 2
question
Biology, 22.06.2019 02:00
How does an angiosperm prevent self pollination
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Why is there a trade-off between survivorship and fecundity?

a. fitness trade-offs occ...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 28.09.2019 03:30
question
Chemistry, 28.09.2019 03:30
Questions on the website: 13722361