Ecosystems have carrying capacities, which are limits to the numbers of organisms and populations they can support. These limits result from such factors as the availability of living and nonliving resources and from such challenges such as predation, competition, and disease. Organisms would have the capacity to produce populations of great size were it not for the fact that environments and resources are finite. This fundamental tension affects the abundance (number of individuals) of species in any given ecosystem.
Standard detail
DCI.LS2.A.9-12.8
Depth 2Parent ID: E9DBC7E0DFE60131C9C768A86D17958EStandard set: Grades 9, 10, 11, 12
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- DCI.LS2.A.9-12.8
- List ID
- •
- Standard ID
- E9DC2910DFE60131C9C868A86D17958E
- ASN identifier
- S2471880
- Subject
- Science
- Grades
- 09, 10, 11, 12
- Ancestor IDs
- E9DBC7E0DFE60131C9C768A86D17958EE9BA16F0DFE60131C97568A86D17958E
- Source document
- Next Generation Science Standards (2013)
- License
- CC BY 3.0 US