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Published byKathleen Rogers Modified over 9 years ago
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U NDERSTANDING P OPULATIONS How Populations Change in Size
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Charles Darwin once calculated that a single pair of elephants could theoretically produce 19 million descendants within 750 years. Darwin made the point that the actual number of elephants is limited by their environment.
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W HAT IS A P OPULATION ? Is all the members of a species living in the same place at the same time. The word population refers to the group in general and also to the size of the population – the number of individuals it contains.
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P ROPERTIES OF P OPULATIONS Described in terms of size, density or dispersion. Density = number of individuals per unit area Dispersion = distribution or arrangement of its individuals Can be even, clumped, or random
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Clumped Uniform Random
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H OW D OES A P OPULATION G ROW ? A change in the size of a population over a given period of time is the growth rate. The growth rate is: birth rate – death rate * Growth rates can be positive, negative or zero.
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H OW F AST C AN A P OPULATION G ROW ? A species’ biotic potential is the fastest rate at which its population can grow. The biotic potential is limited by the reproductive potential- the maximum number of offspring each member can produce.
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P OPULATION G ROWTH CONT. Reproductive potential increases when individuals produce more offspring at a time, reproduce more often, and reproduce earlier in life. Reproducing early shortens the generation time (average time it takes to reach a reproductive age)
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E XPONENTIAL G ROWTH Exponential growth means that populations grow faster and faster (example: dogs) Exponential growth occurs in nature only when populations have plenty of food and space, and have little or no competition or predators.
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W HAT L IMITS P OPULATION G ROWTH ? Carrying capacity Resources Competition within a population
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T YPES OF P OPULATION R EGULATION Cause of death in a population may be density dependent or density independent. Density dependent – deaths occur because of crowding in a population. Density independent – a certain proportion of a population dies regardless of the population’s density.
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