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Published bySteven May Modified over 8 years ago
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A population is a group of individuals of a single species that occupy the same general area. Two important characteristics of any population are density and spacing. Density = number of individuals per unit area or volume Dispersion – pattern of spacing among individuals
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Mark-recapture method. Sampling technique used to estimate populations Take a proportion of catch N = (# marked in first catch) x (Total # in second catch) / # of recaptures in second catch
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Study of factors that affect the growth and decline of populations Births - reproduction Immigration – new individuals from other areas Mortality - death Emigration – movement of individuals out of a population
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Number of births. Number of deaths. Populations grow when its birthrate is greater than its death rate. If more individuals die than are born, a population will decrease.
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Number of individuals that enter or leave the population. Immigration- movement of individuals into an area. Causes a population to grow. Emigration- movement of individuals out of an area. Causes a decrease in population size.
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A variable affected by the number of organisms in a given area Availability of nesting
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Variables that affect a population regardless of density Weather Flood Fires
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Age specific summary of the survival pattern of a population Cohort – group of individuals of same age, from birth until death
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Graphic way of representing data in a life table.
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Type 1 curve – relatively flat at start, reflects low death rates during middle life, then drops steeply as death rates increase among older age groups. Example - humans
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Type 3 curve – very high mortality, but decreased mortality later in life. Example would be oysters, fish, invertebrates
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Type 2 curve – intermediate between type 1 and type 3.
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Population increase under ideal conditions J – shaped curve Assumes unlimited resources
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If a population has lots of space and food, and no predators or disease…that population size will increase.
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Ultimately, there is a limit to the number of individuals that can occupy a habitat Carrying Capacity – maximum population size that an environment can support at a particular time. Symbol is K
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Growth pattern in which the individuals in a population reproduce at a constant rate.
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Basically, the carrying capacity is the largest number of individuals that an environment can support. …there are only so many resources to go around.
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