British Sign Language Glossaries of Curriculum Terms

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BSL Environmental Science Glossary - K-selected species definition


Definition: K selected species are species like humans who produce offspring less frequently and in smaller numbers. R selected species reproduce just once in their lifetime and produce many offspring. We humans typically have just one child at a time, or maybe two (occasionally three or four) and that is because the environment that we live in is relatively safe and the chances of a child surviving into adulthood is high. Whereas for fish, water is a more dangerous environment which is why they produce so many offspring; they may lay hundreds and thousands of eggs but many of them will perish and sometimes only a few eggs will hatch. The other difference (between K and R selected species) is that when we humans have a child we nurture/look after our babies and care for our children as they grow up until they finally become independent. Fish are completely different; fish lay their eggs and then swim away - the eggs are just left until they hatch at which point these tiny fish are, in a very short space of time, independent. The difference is that humans (K selected species) reproduce more than once in a lifetime and have less offspring; fish (R selected species) reproduce just once in their lifetime and have many offspring.