Math, asked by cherrypie89000, 11 months ago

in 2001, there were 450 birds in the forest. In 2006, there were 350 birds in the forest. What was the rate of change in the number of birds per year?

Answers

Answered by Ak11y
0
Unqualified, the statement that ≈1.3% of the ≈10,000 presently known bird species have become extinct since A.D. 1500 yields an estimate of ≈26 extinctions per million species per year (or 26 E/MSY). This is higher than the benchmark rate of ≈1 E/MSY before human impacts, but is a serious underestimate. First, Polynesian expansion across the Pacific also exterminated many species well before European explorations. Second, three factors increase the rate: (i) The number of known extinctions before 1800 is increasing as taxonomists describe new species from skeletal remains. (ii) One should calculate extinction rates over the years since taxonomists described the species. Most bird species were described only after 1850. (iii) Some species are probably extinct; there is reluctance to declare them so prematurely. Thus corrected
Answered by isro48
2
20birds/year. this is decreasing rate of bird per year
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