Chapter 19- Populations A population is a group of organisms of the same species living in the same place at the same time Millions of different populations all evolving according to their own self interest in a particular environment. But each population is a part of the environment of its neighbors, so any evolutionary change has a ripple effect.
A Population Group of organisms of the same species living in the same place at the same time Individuals may come and go, but the population can remain the same
Population Growth Since each organism of a population is governed by the selfish gene, populations tend to grow If unlimited resources are present, growth will be exponential It will proceed very quickly for rapidly reproducing organisms and more slowly for slowly reproducing ones The curve, however, will always be a “J” curve or an exponential growth curve
Generation# of bacteriatime min 3430min 4845min 5161hr 63275min 76490min min 92562hrs hrs , , ,5364hrs 18131, , , ,048,5765hrs 222,097, ,194, ,388,608
Population Growth 2 Resources are never unlimited, though. As population rises, resources decline. If the growth is too rapid, resources are rapidly depleted and a population crash can occur This pattern occurs often with many populations (including humans) Gypsy moth caterpillar
Population Growth 3 More often what happens is that the resources slowly decrease, the growth rate slowly decreases, and they meet. This point that they oscillate around is the carrying capacity of the environment for that particular organism So when would you “harvest” these individuals? (1,2,3,4,or 5) S - shaped curve
Population Mortality Organisms differ on strategies of reproduction and differ on types of predation Those organisms that put much care into their few young tend to have good survivorship of young Those organisms that spread their young all over tend to have poor survivorship of their young A graphic representation of the rates of survival at different ages is called a survivorship curve
Population Density and Dispersion Population density is simply the number of individuals measured per unit of area or volume Additionally, the population can clump in different ways –Random –Clumped –Regular
Growth Rate Limiting Factors (effecting birth or mortality rates) Density-Dependent –Predation –Increased competition for scarce resources –Sickness –Others?... Density-Independent –Weather Ice Age Global Warming Flood El Nino Etc. Range of Tolerance is an important factor: temperature, light, salinity, nutrients, water
Human Growth Patterns What are the causes that allow this to happen? What are some possible consequences of this? What are some possible results of the population boom? What will the future look like?
Graph showing possible future population growth based on Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a woman has