Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySimon York Modified over 8 years ago
2
What is population? Group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area
3
Does population change? Sea otters, kelp, and sea urchins
4
Kelp forests offer a habitat for sea otters Sea urchins feed on kelp Sea otters feed on sea urchins
6
What do you think happens when sea otters are hunted? –Sea urchins increase or decrease? –Kelp forest increase or decrease? Sea otters are then placed on the endangered species list So now what happens to the population of sea otter? –Starts to increase How does this affect the kelp and the sea urchins? –Sea urchins start to get eaten again=decrease in # –Kelp increases b/c less sea urchins to eat them
7
But now we have a new hunter….
8
What happens to the sea otter, kelp, and sea urchins?
9
What does this tell us about population? Population changes There are many factors that influence a population –Natural –Unnatural Population density has a great impact on ecosystems
10
3 important characteristics of Population Geographic Distribution Density Growth Rate ***Population Age structure is also an important characteristic
11
Geographic Distribution AKA Range Describes an area inhabited by a population Can vary –Few cubic centimeters –Kilometers of the ocean
14
Density # of individuals per unit area Low density –Cactus in desert High density –Other desert plants and succulents
16
Math Time Formula for calculating population density Population density=Number of individuals units area Problem: Suppose there are 150 bullfrogs living in a pond that covers an area of 3 square kilometers. What is the density of the bullfrog population? 50 bullfrogs per square kilometer
17
Growth Rate Many factors affect growth rate
18
3 Factors that affect population size # of births # of deaths # of individuals that enter or leave population Population will increase or decrease depending on # of individuals added or removed
19
Have more births than deaths? –Population increases Have more deaths than births? –Population decreases Have equal amounts of births and deaths? –Population remains constant What happens to the population when we….
21
Immigration “im”= in Migrate= to move from one place to another Immigration is the individual movement into an area Animals in search of mates and food in new areas
26
Emigration “E” means ‘out’ Migrate means to move from one place to another Emigrate means individuals moving out of one place and into another Young wolves and bears leaving as they mature Shortage of food
27
Two types of growth Exponential growth –Individuals reproduce at a constant rate Logistic growth –Occurs when a populations growth slows or stops after a period of exponential growth
28
Exponential Growth Occurs under ideal conditions with unlimited resources Think about exponents in math…. Starts slowly then sky rockets to infinity Our graph will look like a J Bacteria
29
Lets look at bacteria… Bacteria reproduce by splitting in half Bacteria have a doubling time of 30 minutes If you start will one bacterium, how many bacteria will there be after the first 30 minutes? –2–2 After an hour? –4–4 After an hour and a half? –8–8 After two hours? –16 After 15 hours? –Over a billion
31
Logistic Growth As resources become less available, the growth of the population slows or stops S-shape curve What we usually see in nature
33
Carrying Capacity The largest number of individuals that a given environment can support The part of the logistic graph after the exponential growth…the flattening out The point at which this flat line reaches the y- axis is the size of the population when the growth rate reaches zero This doesn’t mean the population stops growing Many factors slow the growth of plants and animals…
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.