Biology, asked by punitharam4252, 1 year ago

Nature has a carrying capacity for a species. Explain.

Answers

Answered by ramchandra64
7
The carring capacity a biological species in an environment is the maximum population size of the species that the environment can sustain indefinitely, given the food, habitat, water, and other necessity available in the environment.

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Answered by sailorking
4

Answer:

The carrying capacity of nature depicts the fact, the total number of living beings, which the nature can accommodate, by the strength of it's resource providing capability. If the population of a species reaches, near the carrying capacity, then none of the living being shall get enough, resource to live in a proper manner.

Explanation:

There are many species, which are coming to an extinct, and some species, such as human beings, are getting over populated, this is causing a dis balance in the ecological cycle, of environment. Due to this reason, human should try to protect wild life as much as possible.

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