According to the passage, which of the following are separated by a plate that is growing
A. The Pacific Ocean and the Sea of Japan.
B. The South Atlantic Ridge and the North Sea Ridge.
C. The Gulf of Mexico and the South Atlantic Ridge.
D. The Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Indian Ocean Ridge.
E. The Black Sea and the Sea of Japan.
Although numbers of animals in a given region may fluctuate from year to year, the fluctuations are often temporary and, over long periods, trivial. Scientists have advanced three theories of population control to account for this relative constancy. The first theory attributes a relatively constant population to periodic cli- matic catastrophes that decimate populations with such frequency as to prevent them from exceeding some particular limit. In the case of small organisms with short life cycles, climatic changes need not be catastrophic: normal seasonal changes in photoperiod(daily amount of sunlight), for example, can govern population growth. This theory— the density-independent view—asserts that climatic factors exert the same regulatory effect on population regardless of the number of individuals in a region. A second theory argues that population growth is primarily density-de- pendent—that is, the rate of growth of a population in a region decreases as the number of animals increases. The mechanisms that manage regulation may vary. For example, as numbers in- crease, the food supply would probably diminish, which would increase mortality. In addition, as Lotka and Volterra have shown, predators can find prey more easily in high-density populations. Other regulators include physiological control mechanisms: for example, Christian and Davis have demonstrated how the crowding that results from a rise in numbers may bring about hor- monal changes in the pituitary and adrenal glands that in turn may regulate population by lowering sexual activity and inhibiting sexual maturation. There is evidence that these effects may persist for three generations in the absence of the original provocation. One challenge for density-dependent theorists is to develop models that would allow the precise prediction of the effects of crowding. A third theory, proposed by Wynne- Edwards and termed "epideic-tic," argues that organisms have evolved a "code"in the form. of social or epideic- tic behavior. displays, such as winterroosting aggregations or group vocalizing; such codes provide organisms with information on population size in a region so that they can, if necessary, ex- ercise reproductive restraint. However, Wynne-Edwards theory, linking animal social behavior. and population control, has been challenged, with some justification, by several studies.
The primary purpose of the passage is to
A. argue against those scientists who maintain that animal populations tend to fluctuate.
B. compare and contrast the density-dependent and epideictic theories of population control.
C. provide example of some of the ways in which animals exercise reproductive restraint to control their own numbers.
D. suggests that theories of population control that concentrate on the social behavior. of animals are more open to debate than are theories that do not.
E. summarize a number of scientific theories that attempt to explain why animal populations do not exceed certain limits.