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Kselected

K-selected is a term in life-history theory used to describe species whose populations tend to stabilize near the carrying capacity of their environment. It arises from the r/K selection framework, which contrasts strategies that maximize short-term reproduction (r-selected) with those that optimize long-term survival near environmental limits (K-selected). The concept emphasizes how species adapt to relatively stable environments where resources are limited and competition is high.

Typical K-selected traits include delayed maturity, longer lifespans, relatively low reproductive rates, substantial parental investment, and

Common examples cited for K-selected strategies are large mammals such as elephants and whales, as well as

Overall, K-selection remains a useful heuristic for understanding certain life-history trade-offs, though modern ecology often emphasizes

greater
body
size.
These
species
often
produce
fewer
offspring
at
a
time
but
provide
more
care
or
protection,
resulting
in
higher
juvenile
survival.
They
are
usually
have
slower
development
and
may
be
more
competitive
for
limited
resources,
occupying
stable
ecological
niches
where
population
levels
remain
near
the
environment’s
carrying
capacity.
many
primates
and
some
seabirds
like
albatrosses.
In
plants
and
other
groups,
the
spectrum
of
life-history
strategies
is
more
continuous,
and
many
species
exhibit
mixed
traits
that
do
not
fit
neatly
into
a
binary
r/K
classification.
The
dichotomy
has
been
criticized
as
overly
simplistic
and
is
now
viewed
as
a
continuum
rather
than
a
strict
categorization.
species-specific
traits
and
continuum
models
over
a
rigid
dichotomy.