Population Parameters - Estimating populations sizes Estimate populations sizes – Mark & Recapture method Lincoln-Peterson estimate no. of animals marked.

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Population Parameters - Estimating populations sizes Estimate populations sizes – Mark & Recapture method Lincoln-Peterson estimate no. of animals marked at t 1 = no. of marked animals captured at t 2. Total no. of animals in pop. Total no. of animals capture at t 2

Lincoln-Peterson estimate no. of animals marked at t 1 = no. of marked animals captured at t 2. Total no. of animals in pop. Total no. of animals capture at t 2 10 marked at t 1 = 1 animal captured at t 2. Total no animals capture at t Population Parameters - Estimating populations sizes

Lincoln-Peterson estimate Population Parameters - Estimating populations sizes Assumptions Marked and unmarked animals must have equal chance of being captured. - Implications for marking method. There must be enough time between sample t 1 sample t 2 for marked animals to intermix with the rest of the population. The population must be closed. No in population size. No immigration, no emigration, no births, no deaths. Inherent biases in sampling are the same for each sample time t 1 & t 2 such that the proportion marked at t 1 should be the same as the number of captured marked at t 2. That the marking technique or trapping has no effect on the mortality of individuals. Animals do not lose their marks. Obvious, but…

Estimate populations sizes – Index of relative abundance Length of meadow vole runways (built under the snow). Population Parameters - Estimating populations sizes

Estimate populations sizes – Index of relative abundance Estimating pheasant populations through roadside surveys Population Parameters - Estimating populations sizes

Cohort life table - survivorship directly observed. This is where a large cohort – all born at the same time- are followed throughout their lives. Static life table - age at death observed. This is a and represents the type of data that you collecedt for your cemetery demography lab. Age structure directly observed. This method involves determining the ages of the living members of a population. Population Parameters – Life Tables

Population Parameters – Survivorship Curves

Survivorship curves are plotted logarithmically on the y-axis for two reasons: 1. A very tall graph is avoided. 2. On a log scale, equal distances on the Y-axis represent equal ratios which can be used to compare relative changes rather than absolute amounts of change. This permits comparing rates of mortality among populations of different sizes.

Population Parameters – Survivorship Curves Type I

Population Parameters – Survivorship Curves Type II Survivorship curve for three species of Turdus: T. merula, the European blackbird; T. philomelos, the song thrush; T. migratorius, the American robin.

Population Parameters – Survivorship Curves Type III