Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Ecology! Sections 43.5
2
Populations Population: all individuals of 1 species in area
Population size : number of individuals Population density : number per area Population distribution : dispersal pattern
3
Distribution patterns
1) Clumped: most common, a) group around resources b) social behavior c) lack of offspring dispersal 2) Uniform (or close enough) a) territory division b) fairly uniform resources 3) Random – rare a) uniform resources b) ignore each other
4
Which of the distribution patterns could result in limiting population size?
5
Population Size Estimates
1) full count 2) Quadrats 3) Transects 4) Mark-recapture m-r good for organisms that move around a lot
6
Mark-recapture Based on assumption:
% of recaptured individuals that are marked.. same as the % of the total population that is marked Steps: day 1 capture organisms & mark them day 2 capture organisms & see what % of the organisms are marked calculation day 2 marked = day 1 marked day 2 total total population
7
Population Growth Positive growth …….. birth & immigration
Negative growth …… death & emigration Migration : periodic change w/ seasons Zero population growth (ZPG) : deaths = births Per capita = per individual Population growth (dN/dt) = births – deaths where d indicates change ….same as Δ N is the number of individuals, t is time so ΔN/Δt
8
r = net reproduction per capita per unit time
N = number of individuals in population Population growth rate = r x N
9
Rapid Population Growth
High r….have lots of babies fast, few deaths High N……large populations grow faster Exponential growth : population grows at a rate proportional to its size a) r remains constant b) ideal conditions allow max r Biotic potential : max r for a population Doubling time: time for pop to double size
10
Logistic Population Growth
Exponential Growth slowed by 1) Density dependent limiting factors predation, parasites, disease limited resources, competition not by Density independent limiting factors weather, natural disasters, humans
11
Carrying capacity = Max # individuals an area can support indefinitely (D) Steady state #2 on graph Life history patterns: adaptations that influence survival, reproduction & population size
12
Reproduction Requires Energy
Amount of available energy affects reproductive rates and success Seasonal reproduction timed to match resource availability Reproductive strategies match environment to maximize repro success
13
Reproductive strategies
r-selected (r = net reproduction per capita per unit time) a) favor low pop density (d independent) b) quick production of many small babies c) high biotic potential so called r-selected K-selected (K = carrying capacity ) a) favor high pop density (d dependent) b) good competitors c) low biotic potential & high parental care
14
Life History Strategies
15
Environmental effect on Repro.
1) Unstable/changing environments a. can show more rapid evolution b. can select different traits each generation c. mature quickly and have lots of babies d. r-selected 2) Stable environments a. longer life span slower to mature b. produce fewer offspring c. more efficient use of E d. K-selected
16
Different Life Histories =
Different Survivorship Curves Type I : live long & prosper (parental care) k-selected Type II : could die at any time… good luck Type III : high infant mortality r-selected
18
Human Population growth
First 1 billion……2.5 mya growth to 2 billion…………..123 years Growth to 3 billion …………. 33 years Growth to 4, 5, 6 ………….. 14, 13, 12
19
Dot video
20
Demographic Transition Model
Niger, Guatemala, Afghanistan : stage 2 India, South Africa, Columbia : stage 3 Brazil, United States, China : stage 4 Germany, Japan : Stage 5
21
Age Structure Diagrams
3 categories of individuals: -pre-reproductive (base) -reproductive (center) -post-reproductive (top) Fast growth = wide shape Slow growth = narrow shape ZPG = straight at bottom, narrows at top Negative growth = bottom & top more narrow than center
22
2014 pop pyramid data
25
U.S.A.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.