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Published byJane Johnson Modified over 9 years ago
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Learning outcomes for today Define a population and describe the attributes that make up that population Describe the 3 types of population distribution Work in a pair to learn about survivorship curves and age structure
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Definition A group of interbreeding individuals of the same species that live in a particular area at a defined time.
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Natality Number of births per 1000 people per year births per year crude birth rate = total population X 1000
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Mortality Number of deaths per 1000 people per year deaths per year Crude death rate = total population X 1000
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Density Number of individuals of a population per unit area of habitat at a specific time. – E.g. Pine trees per hectare of the Urewera forest in 2007 – E.g. Diatoms per cubic metre of sea water taken of Raglan beach in 2006
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Low Density Only a few animals per unit area Highly territorial, solitary animals High Density Individuals crowded together Colonial organisms
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Distribution How individuals are spaced in an area 3 types of distribution 1.Random 2.Clumped 3.Uniform
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Distribution - Random Presence of one individual does not directly affect the location of another individual. Uncommon in animals Often seen in plants
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Distribution - Clumped Individuals are grouped in patches, sometimes around a resource The presence of one individual increases the probability of finding another E.g. Herding or highly social species (buffalo)
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Distribution - Uniform Individuals are evenly spaced Presence of one individual decreases the probability of finding another close by
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Pair Share Class 1.Describe why some organisms may exhibit a clumped distribution because of a.Resources in the environment b.A group social behaviour
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Pair Share Class 2.Describe a social behaviour found in some animals that may encourage a uniform distribution
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Pair Share Class 3.Describe the type of environment that would encourage uniform distribution
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Pair Share Class 4. Give an example of each of the following types of distribution patterns a.Clumped b.Random c.Uniform
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Survivorship There are three types of survivorship curves – Type I Mortality is very low in the infant and juvenile years, and throughout most of adult life. Mortality increases rapidly in old age. – Type II Mortality is relatively constant through all life stages (no one age is more susceptible than another) – Type III Mortality is very high during early life stages, followed by a very low death rate for the few individuals reaching adulthood.
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Survivorship
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Your Task: Biozone exercise Survivorship curves 286
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Population Age Structure The age structure of a population refers to the relative proportion of individuals in each age group in the population. The population is usually divided into three groups – Pre-reproductive – Reproductive – Post-reproductive
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Population Age Structure This is usually shown as a age pyramid. The shape of the pyramid show different things – True pyramid – an expanding population – Bell shaped – a stable population – Urn shaped – a diminishing population
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An Expanding Population
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A Stable Population
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A Diminishing Population
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