Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCornelia Allison Modified over 8 years ago
1
Population Growth Chapter 36.4 - 36.6
2
What you need to know! The differences between exponential and logistic models of population growth How density-dependent and density-independent factors can control population growth
3
Population Growth The rate at which a population increases or decreases G = growth rate of a population (# of individuals added per unit time) N = population size (at a given time) r = intrinsic rate of increase (maximum capacity of members of that population to reproduce) The average contribution of each individual to population growth r = (births – deaths)/N in a time period K = carrying capacity (maximum population size an environment can support)
4
Practice A pod of dolphins has 100 members. In a single reproductive cycle there are 50 births and 30 deaths. What is the net increase per individual (r) in one reproductive cycle?
5
Exponential Growth https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6pcRR5Uy6w https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6pcRR5Uy6w
6
Exponential Growth Model Rate of population growth under ideal conditions The whole population is reproducing in each time interval G = rN
7
Logistic Growth Model Populations cannot increase indefinitely Limiting factors will restrict population growth Carrying capacity is the maximum population size an environment can support G = rN[(K-N)/K]
8
Logistic Growth https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXlyYFXyfIM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXlyYFXyfIM
9
Practice If a pod of dolphins has 150 members (N) and an intrinsic rate of increase of.2 (r), then what is the growth rate (G) in ideal conditions (G = rN) in a single reproductive cycle? If that same pod of dolphins is in an environment that can only support 200 dolphins (K), then what is G in a single reproductive cycle?
10
Limiting Factors Anything that reduces population growth Density-dependent factors apply as populations increase in size: Competition: food, water, territory, etc. Health (disease, waste) Physiological factors: stress triggered transformations Density-independent (abiotic) factors apply to all populations, regardless of size Weather Climate change Natural disasters
11
Boom-and-Bust Some species have very specific patterns of growth followed by rapid decline Lemmings and Snowshoe hair both exhibit this pattern Several hypothesis exist for why the populations bust, but no one knows for certain Lynx hunt Snowshoe hair almost exclusively and show the same boom-and-bust pattern Predator prey interdependence
12
In your notes! Explain the difference between exponential and logistic growth. Use the vocabulary form our lecture today.
13
R and K Selection https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bu6ouKt9zhs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bu6ouKt9zhs
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.