The carrying capacity for a species in an ecosystem is primarily determined by _____.


A. the species’ fertility

B. the number of predators

C. the ecosystem’s resources

D. a boom-and-bust curve

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The correct answer is; C. the ecosystem’s resources

The carrying capacity for a species in an ecosystem is primarily determined by the ecosystem’s resources.

The carrying capacity of a species in an ecosystem is the largest population size of the species that can be supported indefinitely by the ecosystem upon the availability of resources such as food, habitat, water, and other resources in the ecosystem. The carrying capacity for a species in an ecosystem is mainly determined by the ecosystem’s resources. Competition, population size, disease, and the amount of resources that each organism consumes in the ecosystem are the factors that can influence the carrying capacity of a species in an ecosystem .



Answer:   C; the ecosystem’s resources

Explanation: The carrying capacity of a biological species is the maximum number of individuals that a given environment can sustain indefinitely.

This number depends on the disponibility of things like the necessities of the species, like water, food, habitat and other things. Those things are the resources of the environment/ecosystem.

Then the correct answer is option C; the ecosystem’s resources