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Ch. 53 Warm-Up 1.(Review) Sketch an exponential population growth curve and a logistic population growth curve. 2.What is an ecological footprint? 3.What are ways that you can reduce your ecological footprint? Define: Demography Semelparity Iteroparity Carrying capacity Exponential growth curve Logistic growth curve K-selection r-selection Ecological footprint
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POPULATION ECOLOGY Chapter 53
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You Must Know: How density, dispersion, and demographics can describe a population. The differences between exponential and logistic models of population growth. How density-dependent and density-independent factors can control population growth.
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Population = group of individuals of a single species living in same general area Density: # individuals / area Dispersion: pattern of spacing between individuals Introduction
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Determining population size and density: Count every individual Random sampling Mark-recapture method
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Patterns of Dispersal: 1.Clumped – most common; near required resource 2.Uniform – usually antagonistic interactions 3.Random – not common in nature
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Additions occur through birth, and subtractions occur through death. Life table : age-specific summary of the survival pattern of a population Represent data with a survivorship curve. Plot # of individuals in a cohort still alive at each age. Demography: the study of vital statistics that affect population size
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Life Table
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Survivorship Curves: Type I curve: low death rate early in life (humans) Type II curve: constant death rate over lifespan (squirrels) Type III curve: high death rate early in life (oysters)
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3 Variables: 1.Age of sexual maturation 2.How often organism reproduces 3.# offspring during each event Note: These traits are evolutionary outcomes, not conscious decisions by organisms Life History: traits that affect an organism’s schedule of reproduction and survival
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Semelparity Big-bang reproduction Many offspring produced at once Individual often dies afterwards Less stable environments Agave Plant
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Iteroparity Repeated reproduction Few, but large offspring More stable environments Lizard Critical factors: survival rate of offspring and repeated reproduction when resources are limited
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N/ t = B-D N = population size t = time Change in Population Size Change in population size during time interval Births during time interval Deaths during time interval = -
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Zero population growth: B = D Exponential population growth: ideal conditions, population grows rapidly
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Unlimited resources are rare Logistic model: incorporates carrying capacity (K) K = maximum stable population which can be sustained by environment dN/dt = r max ((K-N)/K) S-shaped curve
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Laboratory Populations
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Factors that limit population growth: Density-Dependent factors: population matters i.e. Predation, disease, competition, territoriality, waste accumulation, physiological factors Density-Independent factors: population not a factor i.e. Natural disasters: fire, flood, weather
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K-selection: pop. close to carrying capacity r-selection: maximize reproductive success K-selectionr-selection Live around KExponential growth High prenatal careLittle or no care Low birth numbersHigh birth numbers Good survival of youngPoor survival of young Density-dependentDensity independent ie. Humansie. cockroaches
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Populations fluctuate due to biotic and abiotic factors 1975-1980: peak in wolf numbers 1995: harsh winter weather (deep snow)
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What do you notice about the population cycles of the showshoe hare and lynx?
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Boom-and-bust cycles Predator-prey interactions Eg. lynx and snowshoe hare on 10-year cycle
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Human Population Growth 2 configurations for a stable human population (zero population growth): A.High birth / high death B.Low birth / low death Demographic transition: occurs when population goes from A B
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Age-Structure Diagrams
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Global Carrying Capacity UN predicts: 7.8 to 10.8 billion people by the year 2050 2012 = 7 billion Estimated carrying capacity = 10-15 billion? Ecological footprint: total land + water area needed for all the resources a person consumes in a pop. 1.7 hectares (ha)/person is sustainable U.S.: 10 ha/person over K?? Limitations? Consequences? Solutions?
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Map of ecological footprint of countries in the world (proportional sizes shown)
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