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Graphing Practice - Populations
By Dana Hojnowski
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Last updated over 1 year ago
12 questions
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Question 1
1.
CHOOSE:
Paper graph or Digital graph
First, graph the
tiger shark data
as one color. Then, graph the
nurse shark data
as another color.
Use "text tool" for the titles.
Use "scribble" for the data points.
visibility
View drawing
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Question 2
2.
At what month would you expect the number of nurse sharks to equal the number of tiger sharks?
Question 3
3.
What does this graph tell you about the trends of the TIGER shark population?
Question 4
4.
What does this graph tell you about the trends of the NURSE shark population?
Question 5
5.
Look at the graph on the second page. In part "A" of the graph, the population is doing what?
increasing drastically
staying the same
decreasing drastically
decreasing slightly
increasing slightly
Question 6
6.
Look at the graph on the second page. In part "B" of the graph, the population is doing what?
staying the same
decreasing drastically
decreasing slightly
increasing drastically
increasing slightly
Question 7
7.
Look at the graph on the second page. In part "C" of the graph, the population is doing what?
increasing drastically
decreasing drastically
staying the same
decreasing slightly
increasing slightly
Question 8
8.
Look at the graph on the second page. In part "D" of the graph, the population is doing what?
decreasing slightly
staying the same
increasing slightly
increasing drastically
decreasing drastically
Question 9
9.
Look at the Deer Population graph. What is the deer population in year 10?
(don't forget a unit)
Question 10
10.
When does the deer population increase the most?
years 0-2
years 2-4
years 4-6
years 6-8
years 8-10
Question 11
11.
Explain. How do you know this set of years has the most increase in deer population?
Question 12
12.
What type of population growth is shown here?
Hint: "J" curve