Chapter 8: Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology 8-1 POPULATION DYNAMICS & CARRYING CAPACITY Population – all members of the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology
Advertisements

Additional notes… Populations & Growth, Limiting Factors
Population Dynamics The change in the size, density, dispersion, and age distribution of a population in response to changes in environmental conditions.
Understanding Populations
CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity
Population Ecology.
Biology 2B Ecosystems Population dynamics.
5 POPULATIONS.
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Think / Pair / Share What factors affect the human population of Brampton/Caledon? Are these the same factors that affect other cities?
Population Biology Chapter 4.
POPULATION = a group of interbreeding organisms (same species) that live in the same place at the same time and compete for the same resources. Resources.
Chapter 8 Population Ecology.
Populations. A look at the factors that tend to increase or decrease the size of a population.
Populations.
Populations Chapter 5.
Chapter 8: Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology 8-1 POPULATION DYNAMICS & CARRYING CAPACITY Population – all members of the.
Ch 4: Population Biology
Chapter 8 Notes Population Dynamics AP Env. Science.
Population Understanding populations The Human Population Biodiversity.
Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity and Conservation Biology
POPULATION DYNAMICS CARRYING CAPACITY
Population Dynamics.
Chapter 5: Populations.
POPULATION BIOLOGY.
Populations Biology
How Populations Grow Read the lesson title aloud to students.
Snowshoe Hare and Canada Lynx Population: a group the same species that live in the same place at the same time Resources: food, water, shelter, space.
CHAPTER 9 Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity and Conservation Biology.
 A population consists of interbreeding members of one species living in a specific area, more or less isolated from other members of their species.
Chapter 4: Population Biology
Population Ecology Chapter 4. GPS SB4 Students will assess the dependence of all organisms on one another and the flow of energy and matter within their.
Chapter 9 Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology Miller – Living in the Environment 13 th ed.
Brainstorm  Please list 3 Abiotic and 3 Biotic factors that affect population growth and decrease in size.
Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 12 th Edition Chapter 9 G. Tyler Miller’s.
Unit III: Populations Chapter 8: Understanding Populations 8-1 How Populations Change in Size Population: all members of a species living in the same place.
Chapter 8 Population Ecology.  They were over- hunted to the brink of extinction by the early 1900’s and are now making a comeback. Core Case Study:
POPULATION DYNAMICS. MAJOR CHARACTERISTICS OF A POPULATION POPULATIONS ARE ALWAYS CHANGING: –size –density –dispersion - clumped, uniform, random –age.
 Populations. What is a population?  Population: a group of organisms all of the same species, which interbreed and live in the same place at the same.
Chapter 8 Population Ecology. Chapter Overview Questions  What are the major characteristics of populations?  How do populations respond to changes.
Populations and Resources. Population Is a group of organisms of one species that lives in the same place, at the same time, and can successfully reproduce.
Population Ecology. Characteristics of a Population Population Dynamics: Population change due to – Population Size – Population Density – Population.
Limits of Populations. Questions for today: What is Population Dynamics? What is Population Dynamics? How does Population Distribution affect Population.
Biology Chapter 4 Population Biology. 4.1 Population Growth If you graph population vs. time, there are some common patterns visible Initially, your graph.
Understanding Populations Chapter 8 Environmental Science.
Chapter 8 Population Ecology. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY  Most populations live in clumps although other patterns occur based on resource.
Population Ecology Chapter 5, Section 3. Population Dynamics Population: all the individuals of a species that live together in an area Demography: the.
, Population Dynamics. Population Dynamics A look at the factors that tend to increase or decrease the size of a population.
Chapter 5 POPULATIONS Lab Biology CP.
Population Dynamics Biology I.
the number of individuals per unit area
Chapter 8 Population Ecology.
Intro to Ecology What is Ecology?
Chapter 4 Population Biology.
Populations Biology.
Populations.
Chapter 4: Pages , 107 September 27-28, 2017
Population Biology Chapter 4.
2.6 Ecosystem Changes.
Populations.
Chapter 5: Populations Sections 1 and 2.
Populations Objective: A4 - Analyze how populations & communities respond to abiotic & biotic factors and recognize that long-term survival of a species.
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Population dynamics A look at the factors that tend to increase or decrease the size of a population.
9 Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology
Population dynamics A look at the factors that tend to increase or decrease the size of a population.
Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology
Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control
Unit 4- Interaction of Living Things
(environmental resistance)
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 8: Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology 8-1 POPULATION DYNAMICS & CARRYING CAPACITY Population – all members of the same species living in a particular area

Major Characteristics of Populations (Population Dynamics) Population Dynamics - changes that occur to a population in response to environmental stress and changes in environmental conditions

Major Characteristics of Populations (Population Dynamics) A) Size – number of individuals B) Density – number of individuals in a certain space C) Dispersion - how they are spaced out across the range D) Age Distribution – the proportion of individuals at each age RANDOM UNIFORMCLUMPED

Factors Affecting Population Growth A) Birth and death rates  Birth Rate > Death Rate  Growth B) Immigration and emigration  Immigration > Emigration  Growth C) Population Change = (Births + Immigration) – (Deaths + Emigration)

Biotic Potential Biotic Potential - capacity of a population for growth Intrinsic rate of increase (r) - rate at which a population would grow if it had unlimited resources Characteristics of populations with high biotic potential: Reproduce early in life Have short generation times Can reproduce many times Produce many offspring each time they reproduce Populations are limited because they have a shortage of: Light Water Space Nutrients

Environmental Resistance Environmental Resistance - all the factors acting jointly to limit the growth of a population Determine carrying capacity (K) – the number of individuals of a given species that can be sustained indefinitely in a given area Carrying capacity is determined by interplay of biotic potential and environmental resistance

Biotic Potential vs. Environmental Resistance Growth Factors (Biotic Potential) Decrease Factors (Environmental Resistance) Abiotic Favorable light Favorable temperature Favorable chemical environment) Too much light or too little light Temperature too high or too low Unfavorable chemical environment Biotic High Reproductive rate Generalized niche Adequate food supply Suitable habitat Ability to compete for resources Ability to hide from or defend against predators Ability to resist diseases and parasites Ability to migrate and live in other habitats Ability to adapt to environmental change Low reproductive rate Specialized niche Inadequate food supply Unsuitable or destroyed habitat Too many competitors Insufficient ability to hide from or defend against predators Inability to resist diseases and parasites Inability to migrate and live in other habitats Inability to adapts to environmental change

Warm-Up What is the difference between environmental resistance and biotic potential?

Types of Population Growth A) Exponential Growth – unlimited growth of a population  Occurs when population has food, space, protection from predation/disease, removal of waste products  Each future generation will grow faster than the last  Ex: bacteria

Types of Population Growth B) Logistical Growth – population grows, slows, and eventually reaches carrying capacity  Phase 1 – exponential growth  Phase 2 – slows down Due to: BR decreases, DR increases, immigration decrease, emigration increases  Phase 3 – population stabilizes, reaches carrying capacity

Factors Affecting Carrying Capacity A) Limiting Factors – factors that control the growth of a population  Density Dependent Factors – factors that depend on the density of the population; control the populations and keep numbers in check Non-native species have a tendency to elude this and grow uncontrollably due to lack of natural predators, etc.  Density Independent Factors – factors that do NOT depend on the density of the population; will affect all populations equally, regardless of their size

Density Dependent Factors A) Competition  Fighting for space, food, water, sunlight, mates, etc.  Can be within the same species or between different species  Some will survive and reproduce, some will survive but NOT reproduce, and some will die B) Herbivory  Predators to plant species  Large loss of plant species may affect other primary consumers

Density Dependent Factors C) Predation  Cyclic relationship (rise of one may induce the fall of the other; trend of rises and falls continues)

Density Dependent Factors D) Parasitism  feed at the expense of their hosts E) Disease  can cause a dramatic drop in a population due to infestation of a disease; decrease in one population may trigger a rise in another!

Density Dependent Factors F) Stress from Overcrowding  species fighting amongst themselves may lead to high levels of stress which may affect an organism’s ability to fight disease

Density Independent Factors A) Weather  Droughts, floods, etc. B) Natural Disasters  Wildfires, hurricanes, etc Sri Lanka Tsunami

Density Independent Factors Sometimes “density-independent” factors do still depend slightly on population size

Population Change Curves in Nature 4 general types of population fluctuations: 1. Stable – population size fluctuates slightly above and below carrying capacity  Usually found in undisturbed areas or where there is little change in climate 2. Irruptive – fairly stable populations that have a population explosion but then return to a lower size rather quickly  Impacted by favorable weather, increase in food supply, decrease in predator

Population Change Curves in Nature 4 general types of population fluctuations: 3. Chaotic Behavior – irregular changes in size with no real pattern seen 4. Cyclic – changes occur in a pattern over a regular period of time  Lynx and hare (10-year cycle)

SexualAsexual