In the real world, many factors determine the numbers of organisms in any one population. Yet a "Superfly" population with unlimited food and no mortality would show what types of growth?
J- shaped growth curve A curve on a graph that records the circumstance wherein, in another condition, the population thickness of a living being increments quickly in an exponential or logarithmic structure, yet then stops unexpectedly as ecological opposition (for example regularity) or some other factor (for example the finish of the reproducing stage) unexpectedly gets compelling.
Population numbers regularly show extraordinary variance, giving the trademark 'blast and bust' patterns of certain bugs, or the ones seen in algal sprouts.
This kind of population development is named 'thickness autonomous' as the guideline of development rate isn't attached to the population thickness until the last accident