Limiting factor
A limiting factor of a system is an input or variable such that a small change in it from the present value would cause a non-negligible change in an output or other measure of the system. A factor which is not limiting over a certain domain of starting conditions may yet be limiting over another domain of starting conditions, including that of the factor in question.
The identification of a factor as limiting is of use only in distinction to one or more other factors which is/are non-limiting. Disciplines differ in their use of the term as to whether they allow the simultaneous existence of more than one limiting factor (which may then be called "co-limiting"), but they all require the existence of at least one non-limiting factor when the terms are used. When all factors are limiting, none are.
In chemical reactions
In the design of chemical reactions to produce a chemical product, one of the reagents may be consumed by the reaction before the others. The amount of product will be limited by the supply of this reagent. The theoretical yield of the reaction is determined by this limiting factor.
In biology and ecology
In biology, common limiting factor resources are environmental conditions that limit the growth, abundance, or distribution of an organism or a population of organisms in an ecosystem.[1]:G-11[2] The concept of limiting factors is based on Liebig's Law of the Minimum, which states that growth is controlled not by the total amount of resources available, but by the scarcest resource. In other words, a factor is limiting if a change in the factor produces increased growth, abundance or distribution of an organism, when other factors necessary to the organisms life do not. Limiting factors may be physical or biological.[1]:417,8
Limiting factors are not all limited to the condition of the species. Some factors may be increased or reduced based on circumstances. An example of a limiting factor is sunlight in the rain forest, where growth is limited to all plants on the forest floor unless more light becomes available. This decreases a number of potential factors that could influence a biological process, but only one is in effect at any one place and time. This recognition that there is always a single limiting factor is vital in ecology; and the concept has parallels in numerous other processes. The limiting factor also causes competition between individuals of a species population. For example, space is a limiting factor. Many predators and prey need a certain amount of space for survival: food, water, and other biological needs. If the population of a species is too high, they start competing for those needs. Thus the limiting factors hold down population in an area by causing some individuals to seek better prospects elsewhere and others to stay and starve.
Some other limiting factors in biology include temperature and other weather related factors.
In business and technology
The AllBusiness.com Business Glossary defines a limiting (constraining) factor as an "item that restricts or limits production or sale of a given product." The examples provided include: "limited machine hours and labor-hours and shortage of materials and skilled labor. Other limiting factors may be cubic feet of display or warehouse space, or working capital."[3] The term is also frequently used in technology literature.[4][5]
The analysis of limiting business factors is part of the program evaluation and review technique, critical path analysis, and theory of constraints as presented in the novel The Goal.
See also
- Abiotic component
- Bateman's principle
- Biotic component
- Competition (biology)
- Competitive exclusion principle
- Ecology
- Resource (biology)
- Shelter
References
- 1 2 Thomas M. Smith., Robert Leo Smith. 2009. Elements of Ecology. Pearson International Edition. 7th Ed.
- ↑ http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Limiting_factor
- ↑ "Business definition for: Limiting (constraining) factor". AllBusiness Business Glossary. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
- ↑ Sheriff, A., Bouchlaghem, D., El-Hamalawi, A., and Yeomans, S. (2012). "Information Management in UK-Based Architecture and Engineering Organizations: Drivers, Constraining Factors, and Barriers". Journal of Management Engineering. 28(2). pp. 170–180.
- ↑ John Leslie King, Vijay Gurbaxani, Kenneth L. Kraemer, F. Warren McFarlan, K. S. Raman & C. S. Yap (June 1994). "Institutional Factors in Information Technology Innovation". Information Systems Research (DOI= 10.1287/isre.5.2.139) 5 (2). pp. 139–169.
Further reading
- Raghothama, K. G. & Karthikeyan, A.S. (2005) "Phosphate acquisition", Plant and Soil 274: 37-49.
- Taylor, W. A. (1934) "Significance of extreme or intermittent conditions in distribution of species and management of natural resources, with a restatement of Liebig's law of the minimum", Ecology 15: 374-379.
- Shelford, V. E. (1952). Paired factors and master factors in environmental relations. Illinois Acad. Sci. Trans., 45: 155-160
- Sundareshwar P.V., J.T. Morris, E.K. Koepfler, and B. Fornwalt (2003) "Phosphorus limitation of coastal ecosystem processes", Science 299:563-565.