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Population Ecology
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Population Number of Individuals of the same species that live together in one area or place
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What dynamics might be involved in predicting population growth?
Population size Population growth rate Carrying Capacity Limiting Factors
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Population Size Number of individuals in a population
Growth occurs when the birthrate is greater than the death rate.
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Population Growth Curves
Exponential growth: Population increases by a constant proportion per unit of time At this growth rate the population exhibits a J-shaped curve
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Population Growth Curves
Logistic growth: Population increases rapidly for a period of time, its growth begins to slow, and ultimately, growth stops (can decrease as well) At this growth rate the population exhibits an S-shaped curve. K (carrying capacity) = maximum population size that an environment can support K
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Factors That Control Population Growth
Populations don’t grow indefinitely because of limiting factors. Limiting Factors Include: Competition Predation Parasitism Crowding Stress Disease
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Competition Primary sources of Competition: Food Water Space Mates Situation in which two or more organisms attempt to use the same scarce resource (this could be a food source, a good location for capturing sunlight by plants, a particular nutrient, etc…)
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Predation A relationship between two organisms in which one organism (predator) kills and devours another organism (prey). Affects population size of both predator and the prey.
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Parasitism: The relationship between two organisms where one organism benefits (parasite) and the other is harmed (host). Example: Tapeworm You are harmed because it lives off your intestinal fluids Segments break off to form a new worm!
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Biodiversity The number of species living within an ecosystem.
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How Populations Evolve
Hardy-Weinberg Principle The frequencies of alleles in a population do not change unless evolutionary forces act on the population. p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1
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How Biodiversity Impacts Population Growth
6 forces that cause populations to evolve: Mutation – ultimate source of all variation Migration – movement of organisms from one population to another, creates gene flow. Nonrandom mating – when individuals prefer to mate with others of their own genotype, inbreeding is an example. Genetic drift – random change in response to their environment. Natural selection –survival of the fittest. Extinction- species that have disappeared permanently.
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