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book The Living World 6th Edition by George Johnson, Jonathan Losos,William Ober,Claire Garrison cover

The Living World 6th Edition by George Johnson, Jonathan Losos,William Ober,Claire Garrison

النسخة 6الرقم المعياري الدولي: 978-0077280086
book The Living World 6th Edition by George Johnson, Jonathan Losos,William Ober,Claire Garrison cover

The Living World 6th Edition by George Johnson, Jonathan Losos,William Ober,Claire Garrison

النسخة 6الرقم المعياري الدولي: 978-0077280086
تمرين 3
Does the Presence of One Species Limit the Population Size of Others
Implicit in Darwin's theory of evolution is the idea that species in nature compete for limiting resources. Does this really happen Some of the best evidence of competition between species comes from experimental fi eld studies, studies conducted not in the laboratory but out in natural populations. By setting up experiments in which two species occur either alone or together, scientists can determine whether the presence of one species has a negative impact on the size of the population of the other species. This experiment concerns a variety of seedeating rodents that occur in North American deserts. In 1988, researchers set up a series of 50-meter!50-meter enclosures to investigate the effect of kangaroo rats on smaller seed-eating rodents. Kangaroo rats were removed from half of the enclosures, but not from the other enclosures. The walls of all the enclosures had holes that allowed rodents to come and go, but in plots without kangaroo rats the holes were too small to allow the kangaroo rats to enter.
The graph to the right displays data collected over the course of the next three years as researchers monitored the number of the smaller rodents present in the enclosures. To estimate the population sizes, researchers determined how many small rodents could be captured in a fi xed interval. Data were collected for each enclosure immediately after the kangaroo rats were removed in 1988, and at three-month intervals thereafter. The graph presents the relative population size-that is, the total number of captures averaged over the number of enclosures (an average is the numerical mean value, calculated by adding a list of values and then dividing this sum by the number of items in the list. For example, if a total of 30 rats were captured from 3 enclosures, the average would be 10 rats). As you can see, the two kinds of enclosures do not contain the same number of small rodents.
Does the Presence of One Species Limit the Population Size of Others  Implicit in Darwin's theory of evolution is the idea that species in nature compete for limiting resources. Does this really happen Some of the best evidence of competition between species comes from experimental fi eld studies, studies conducted not in the laboratory but out in natural populations. By setting up experiments in which two species occur either alone or together, scientists can determine whether the presence of one species has a negative impact on the size of the population of the other species. This experiment concerns a variety of seedeating rodents that occur in North American deserts. In 1988, researchers set up a series of 50-meter!50-meter enclosures to investigate the effect of kangaroo rats on smaller seed-eating rodents. Kangaroo rats were removed from half of the enclosures, but not from the other enclosures. The walls of all the enclosures had holes that allowed rodents to come and go, but in plots without kangaroo rats the holes were too small to allow the kangaroo rats to enter. The graph to the right displays data collected over the course of the next three years as researchers monitored the number of the smaller rodents present in the enclosures. To estimate the population sizes, researchers determined how many small rodents could be captured in a fi xed interval. Data were collected for each enclosure immediately after the kangaroo rats were removed in 1988, and at three-month intervals thereafter. The graph presents the relative population size-that is, the total number of captures averaged over the number of enclosures (an average is the numerical mean value, calculated by adding a list of values and then dividing this sum by the number of items in the list. For example, if a total of 30 rats were captured from 3 enclosures, the average would be 10 rats). As you can see, the two kinds of enclosures do not contain the same number of small rodents.         Drawing Conclusions  Do these results support the hypothesis that kangaroo rats compete with other small rodents to limit their population sizes
Does the Presence of One Species Limit the Population Size of Others  Implicit in Darwin's theory of evolution is the idea that species in nature compete for limiting resources. Does this really happen Some of the best evidence of competition between species comes from experimental fi eld studies, studies conducted not in the laboratory but out in natural populations. By setting up experiments in which two species occur either alone or together, scientists can determine whether the presence of one species has a negative impact on the size of the population of the other species. This experiment concerns a variety of seedeating rodents that occur in North American deserts. In 1988, researchers set up a series of 50-meter!50-meter enclosures to investigate the effect of kangaroo rats on smaller seed-eating rodents. Kangaroo rats were removed from half of the enclosures, but not from the other enclosures. The walls of all the enclosures had holes that allowed rodents to come and go, but in plots without kangaroo rats the holes were too small to allow the kangaroo rats to enter. The graph to the right displays data collected over the course of the next three years as researchers monitored the number of the smaller rodents present in the enclosures. To estimate the population sizes, researchers determined how many small rodents could be captured in a fi xed interval. Data were collected for each enclosure immediately after the kangaroo rats were removed in 1988, and at three-month intervals thereafter. The graph presents the relative population size-that is, the total number of captures averaged over the number of enclosures (an average is the numerical mean value, calculated by adding a list of values and then dividing this sum by the number of items in the list. For example, if a total of 30 rats were captured from 3 enclosures, the average would be 10 rats). As you can see, the two kinds of enclosures do not contain the same number of small rodents.         Drawing Conclusions  Do these results support the hypothesis that kangaroo rats compete with other small rodents to limit their population sizes
Drawing Conclusions
Do these results support the hypothesis that kangaroo rats compete with other small rodents to limit their population sizes
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The Living World 6th Edition by George Johnson, Jonathan Losos,William Ober,Claire Garrison
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