Survivorship curve = so, first of all, it's a curve, as in a graph.
It describes "survivorship" - the rate of survival, in other words: out of 100 organisms that are born, how many survive. This rate is different among species, for example, most humans live out to most of their life span, and almost all can survive well beyond a reproductive age.
However, in frogs for example, many many individuals are born, but only few can survive to adulthood: most die very young, before reproductive age.
So if you hear about a new species: let's say dogs, and you want to know how long they would live, you would look at their sirvivorship curve (and in some breeds of dogs, those that are likely not to be in shelters, but in homes, the survivorship curve would be similar as in humans: almost all individuals born can live long.
Weathering is wearing down objects by elements in an environment
both alleles in the heterozygous
genotype are exhibit in the phenotypes. Allele
is completely dominant over the other, and it is the phenotype is a blend of the two
homozygous phenotypes, there are more than two forms of the same gene, and
there maybe one more superior form and several different phenotypes
C. The brain sends messages to the spinal cord