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IS3-4 Population And Ag Unit Lesson 3
Ms Dallara
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Notes Populations Introduction to Population Dynamics
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I. Populations The world is divided into millions of species.
A. What is a population? The world is divided into millions of species. Within a species, a population is a group of individuals that are actually available to each other for mating. A species may be spread across the globe, while a population tends to cluster together.
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I. Populations B. Examples
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I. Populations C. Population Dynamics
Populations grow when birth rate + immigration rate (# of organisms moving into a population) > death rate + emigration rate (# of organisms moving out of a population) Populations decline when birth rate + immigration rate (# of organisms moving into a population) < death rate + emigration rate (# of organisms moving out of a population)
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This type of growth is called exponential growth.
II. Population Growth Populations and Resources Resources determine how a given population will grow. In general, any population of organisms with plenty of resources and ideal conditions tends to grow fast. This type of growth is called exponential growth.
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II. Population Growth Doubling Time
Exponential growth has a fixed doubling time. There is a certain number of days, or months, or years in which the population doubles.
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II. Population Growth C. Exponential Growth
At first the population grows slowly, but at some point it takes off.
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III. Limiting Factors A. No population can continue exponential growth forever: resources are finite. 1. Resources, matter and energy in short supply limit how large a population can grow, therefore resources can be limiting factors.
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a. examples: competition, predation, parasitism and crowding
B. 1. Density-dependent limiting factors control population size when a population is large and crowded. a. examples: competition, predation, parasitism and crowding 2. Density-independent limiting factors control population size regardless of whether a population is large or small. a. examples: natural causes such as geothermal activity, extreme weather
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Marin County Stats
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IV. Carrying Capacity & Population Growth
Limiting factors determine the carrying capacity, or the number of individuals in a population that can be sustained indefinitely in a given ecosystem.
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IV. Carrying Capacity & Population Growth
When a population is small compared to the carrying capacity, it grows rapidly. What happens next depends on many factors.
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IV. Carrying Capacity & Population Growth
S Curve The population slows as it approaches the carrying capacity and levels off, reaching a steady state.
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IV. Carrying Capacity & Population Growth
J Curve A period of rapid population increase followed by collapse. Population growth disrupts the ecosystem so badly that its carrying capacity is reduced, and the species suffers a die-off from which it never fully recovers.
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IV. Carrying Capacity & Population Growth
J Curve Example
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