Figure 52.0 Monarch butterflies
Figure 52.0x Monarch butterfly migration
Figure 52.1 Aerial census for African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) in the Serengeti of East Africa
Figure 52.2 Patterns of dispersion within a population’s geographic range
Figure 52.2ax2 Clumped dispersion: buffalo, swans, fish, lupine
Table 52.1 Life Table for Belding Ground Squirrels (Spermophilus beldini) at Tioga Pass, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California
Table 52.2 Reproductive Table for Belding Ground Squirrels (Spermophilus beldingi) at Tioga Pass, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California
Figure 52.3 Idealized survivorship curves
Figure 52.4 An example of big-bang reproduction: Agave (century plant)
Figure 52.5 Cost of reproduction in female red deer on the island of Rhum, in Scotland
Figure 52.6 Probability of survival over the following year for European kestrels after raising a modified brood
Figure 52.7 Variation in seed crop size in plants: Dandelion and coconut palm
Figure 52.8 Population growth predicted by the exponential model
Figure 52.9 Example of exponential population growth in nature
Figure Reduction of population growth rate with increasing population size (N)
Table 52.3 A Hypothetical Example of Logistic Population Growth, Where K=1,000 and r max =0.05 per Individual per Year
Figure Population growth predicted by the logistic model
Figure How well do these populations fit the logistic population growth model?
Figure Graphic model showing how equilibrium may be determined for population density
Figure Decreased fecundity at high population densities
Figure Decreased survivorship at high population densities
Figure Decline in the breeding population of the northern pintail (Anas actua) from 1955 to 1998
Figure Long-term study of the moose (Alces alces) population of Isle Royale, Michigan
Figure Extreme population fluctuations
Figure Population cycles in the snowshoe hare and lynx
Figure Human population growth
Figure Demographic transition in Sweden and Mexico,
Figure Age-structure pyramids for the human population of Kenya (growing at 2.1% per year), the United States (growing at 0.6% per year), and Italy (zero growth) for 1995
Figure Ecological footprint in relation to available ecological capacity