The answer will depend on the time scale covered by the graph and the method used for counting the population. The number of mice foraging when there are babies will depend on the availability of food: if it is easy they will not wish to spend time outdoors, for example.
On a longer time scale it might show that the population fell for some reason. This could be lack of food or of predators that were successful. In the first case, the smaller population in the following period could be supported by local food resources and so the population recovered. The case of over-predation would lead to a scarcity of food for the predator and so their numbers would decline. This would allow the field mice population to recover.
More detailed local knowledge is required before anything can be deduced from the information.
Finally, it could simply be that a local farmer used powerful pesticides and that these killed the predators who ate poisoned field mice! Or the farmer was replaced by one who was less mercenary.
What two varibles are plotted on collector charcteristc curve
Descriptive statistics
it is shaped roughly like a bell... a bell curve.
a System curve is used in hydrolic anylyses to dtermine the duty point of a pump for a certain pipe line. The pump curve and system curve are plotted on the same graph and where the two cross each other is the duty point, the curve is a Head(meters) vs Flow(m3/hour). The system curve Head = static head + head loss due to friction in pipe + secondary head loss *This is calculated for a certain flow to determine the Head so it can be plotted on the curve
It's true: a curve is a curve. Did you really need me to tell you that?
A population that grows until it reaches its carrying capacity typically shows an S-shaped curve, known as logistic growth. Initially, the population grows slowly, then accelerates, and finally levels off as it reaches the carrying capacity of the environment.
A J-shaped curve converts to an S-shaped curve when a limiting factor causes the population growth rate to slow down and reach a carrying capacity. At this point, the population stabilizes and fluctuates around the carrying capacity, resulting in an S-shaped curve.
What two varibles are plotted on collector charcteristc curve
J-shaped
A J-shaped curve represents exponential growth where the population increases rapidly without reaching a carrying capacity. An S-shaped curve, on the other hand, represents logistic growth where the population grows exponentially at first but slows down and stabilizes as it reaches its carrying capacity.
s-shaped/curved
A J-shaped curve is often referred to as exponential growth, which illustrates a rapid increase in a population or entity over time. This curve demonstrates a steady rise and acceleration in growth without any limiting factors in place.
Descriptive statistics
An analemma is an egg-shaped or figure-eight curve which results when the sun's position in the sky is plotted over the course of the year at the same hour of mean solar time every day.
logistic growth
A population's growth curve most closely resembles an "S" shaped curve, known as the logistic growth curve. Initially, the curve rises slowly as the population grows, followed by a period of rapid growth, before leveling off as the environment's carrying capacity is reached and growth stabilizes.
A population growth curve shows the change in the size of a population over time. It typically consists of four phases: exponential growth, plateau, decline, and equilibrium. The curve is often represented by an S-shaped logistic curve, which shows the pattern of population growth leveling off as it reaches carrying capacity.