neutral: neither species directly affect the other species, commensalism: one species benefits and the other one is not affected, mutualism: both benefit, competition: both are harmed by interaction, parasitism: where on species benefits and the other is harmed.
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 2nd, 2015, 6:15 pm
by Jake R
i'm sorry i'm new to the questions marathon i did the hide code but it doesn't show for me, is it just that it doesn't show for me or did i mess it up if i did i'm sorry
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 2nd, 2015, 7:59 pm
by varunscs11
Also there is amensalism where one is harmed and the other is not affected and then of course predation where one benefits and the other is harmed and finally antagonism/competition where both species are harmed.
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 3rd, 2015, 7:32 am
by Jake R
here's a simple one:
describe in detail how the most common type of hydropower works, and also describe the benefits of using it (you don't need to go into detail on that one.)
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 4th, 2015, 4:02 pm
by amp 3914
Will endangered species included?
Will there be any formulas that need to be learned?
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 4th, 2015, 4:10 pm
by Unome
amp 3914 wrote:Will there be any formulas that need to be learned?
First you should read this. Then you should post your questions here.
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 7th, 2015, 9:55 pm
by CulturallyScientific
To answer Jake R's question:
Most common form of hydropower comes with dams. Dams function by altering the flow of water from a source; the buildup, or reservoir, creates a powerful flow/intake that can then turn a turbine, and thus power a generator.
Benefits: dams are relatively cheap, are renewable year-round as long as the reservoir is full, and can reduce downstream flooding.
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 20th, 2015, 6:22 am
by sciolylover13
I'm just going to go ahead and ask a question...
1. Edge effects are the result of what?
2. What is habitat fragmentation?
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 21st, 2015, 5:15 pm
by chscioly
1) Edge effects are the result of different conditions on either side of the boundary (I think...)
2) Habitat fragmentation is when some sort of boundary divides habitats into smaller pieces that divide populations and drastically change the ecosystem. Habitat fragmentation is often caused by humans, when they build roads or clear land for farms.
Re: Green Generation B/C
Posted: November 21st, 2015, 7:14 pm
by sciolylover13
chscioly wrote:
1) Edge effects are the result of different conditions on either side of the boundary (I think...)
2) Habitat fragmentation is when some sort of boundary divides habitats into smaller pieces that divide populations and drastically change the ecosystem. Habitat fragmentation is often caused by humans, when they build roads or clear land for farms.
To be more specific, Edge effects are changes in population or community structures (usually an increase) at the boundary of 2 habitat fragments. Otherwise, good.