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POPULATIONS & CARRYING CAPACITY

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Presentation on theme: "POPULATIONS & CARRYING CAPACITY"— Presentation transcript:

1 POPULATIONS & CARRYING CAPACITY
02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

2 Population: all the individuals of a species that live together in an area
Demography: the statistical study of populations, make predictions about how a population will change 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

3 Three Key Characteristics of Populations
Size, number of individuals (N) Density (N/ area) Dispersion, Random, uniform, clumped, (appropriate scale) 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

4 Three Key Characteristics of Populations
1. Size: number of individuals in an area Characterized by (N) Growth Rate: Birth Rate (natality) - Death Rate (mortality) (How many individuals are born vs. how many die) 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

5 Three Key Characteristics of Populations
2. Density: measurement of population per unit area or unit volume Pop. Density = # of individuals ÷ unit of space 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

6 4 Factors that affect density
1. Immigration- movement of individuals into a population 2. Emigration- movement of individuals out of a population 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

7 4 Factors that affect density
3. Density-dependent factors- Biotic factors in the environment that have an increasing effect as population size increases   Ex. disease competition parasites 4. Density-independent factors- Abiotic factors in the environment that affect populations regardless of their density   Ex. temperature storms habitat destruction drought 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

8 Three Key Characteristics of Populations
Dispersion: describes their spacing relative to each other 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

9 Dynamic characteristics of populations
Age distribution, proportions of young, middle-aged, old Differs in growing, stable, decreasing populations 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

10 Factors That Affect Future Population Growth
Immigration + + - Population Mortality Natality - Emigration

11 Changes in populations
Growth Expansion of species’ populations may lead to evolution of new species Decline Shrinking species’ populations may lead to extinction Small populations Narrowly specialized species 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

12 Changes in populations
ΔN = +B +I –D –E +B = births (birth rate) +I = immigrants (immigration rate) – D = deaths (death rate) – E = emigrants (emigration rate) (For many [most] natural populations I and E are minimal.) 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

13 Other factors that affect population growth
Limiting factor- any biotic or abiotic factor that restricts the existence of organisms in a specific environment. EX.- Amount of water Amount of food Temperature 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

14 Other factors that affect population growth
Carrying Capacity- the maximum population size that can be supported by the available resources There can only be as many organisms as the environmental resources can support 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

15 J-shaped curve (exponential growth)
Carrying Capacity Nu m b e r J-shaped curve (exponential growth) Carrying Capacity (k) S-shaped curve (logistic growth) Ok so Time

16 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

17 Logistic model Logistic model works, to a point.
Real organisms have time lags for growth, time to develop eggs, flowers, etc. seasonality, longevity Real populations may exceed carrying capacity. Easter Island Pribloff Reindeer Kaibab Deer 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

18 Easter Island Discovered by Polynesians ~ A.D. 1000
Population grew to several thousand Used trees for canoes to hunt dolphins Used wood for cooking Also ate birds, eggs, vegetables Resources (trees) depleted No canoes, no dolphins Warfare over land, food resources Population fell to ~ 100 when discovered by Dutch, Easter Sunday 1722. 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

19 2 Life History Patterns 1. “R” Strategists short life span
small body size reproduce quickly have many young little parental care Ex: cockroaches, weeds, bacteria

20 2 Life History Patterns 2. “K” Strategists long life span
large body size reproduce slowly have few young provides parental care Ex: humans, elephants

21 Two general types of Life History Strategies
Life History trait r-adapted, Opportunistic K-adapted, Equilibrium Offspring Many, small (high r) Fewer, large (low r) Offspring survival Low High Parental care Rare Common Reproductive age Early Later Reprod. “seasons” 1-few Many Habitat Unstable, temporary Stable, permanent Competitiveness Population regulation Density independent Density dependent Population fluctuation Irruptive Stable near K

22 Survivorship curves 3 types: Type 1 Type 2 Type 3 02 June 2010
Populations.ppt

23 Survivorship curves Type 1
Most individuals survive childhood and middle age rapidly decline in old age Example: humans 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

24 Survivorship curves Type 2 Example: birds
Roughly a constant mortality rate throughout individual’s life span Example: birds 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

25 Survivorship curves Type 3
Most individuals will die early in life and not make it to adulthood Example: frogs, plants 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt

26 Life History Strategies
Fluctuating populations of two interacting populations Based on pelts sold by Canadian trappers to the Hudson Bay Company, ~ 02 June 2010 Populations.ppt


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