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Studying Populations. How many beans are in the jar? With your lab partner…Discuss a way you can find out how many beans are in the jar without dumping.

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Presentation on theme: "Studying Populations. How many beans are in the jar? With your lab partner…Discuss a way you can find out how many beans are in the jar without dumping."— Presentation transcript:

1 Studying Populations

2 How many beans are in the jar? With your lab partner…Discuss a way you can find out how many beans are in the jar without dumping the jar. You have a limited amount of time to figure it out.

3 How do you determine a population’s size? Direct Observation Indirect Observation Sampling Mark-and-Recapture Studies

4 Direct Observation Count the number of organisms in natural setting ecosystem. PROSCONS Obvious wayNot practical: Cannot do this in large areas Reliable because it isn’t an estimate Best if organism doesn’t move Limited view (only as many as you count)

5 Examples: How many in the population of Starfish? How many in the population of people at the beach?

6 Indirect Observation Observe signs of the organism and count the signs instead of the organisms themselves. PROSCONS Sometimes easier to count signs than mobile organisms An estimate: need some basic information Easy calculations to make an estimate Still hard to do in large areas Adds to researchSigns can be hard to interpret: need basic info

7 Examples: How many in the population of bears? How many in the bird population?

8 Sampling (Random Sampling) Make an estimate by counting the number of organisms in a small area and then multiplying it to find the number of organisms in the larger area. PROSCONS Estimate-made on reasonable assumptions Concentrate on small area; multiply to find big area Area needs to represent total area Actually counting organisms Needs to be random

9 Examples: How many in the population? A B C D 12341234 123 4 123 4

10 Name/Date/Class Period on a Clean Sheet of Paper

11 Mr. Luce is very concerned with the number of deer in Northeast Ohio and the increase in car accidents. To study this he surveyed 3 communities about their deer populations and found on average 10 deer live per square mile. 1.What method of population study did he use? 2. What could make his result more reliable?

12 While on vacation Mrs. Goodman wondered how many people used the hotel pool in the morning. When she arrived to sun bathe at noon she counted the towels laying on chairs. 3. Which method of population study did she use? 4. Name one problem that could arise with her data.

13 Mr. Holman is trying to figure out how many teachers eat in the lunch room each day. 5. What method of population study would be best and why?

14 Mark-and-Recapture Studies Collect a group of organisms and label the organisms. Release them, then later collect another group. Count the ones with marks, do calculations to estimate total number. PROSCONS Estimate-made on reasonable assumptions Estimate-lengthy calculations Can observe health of organisms Time consuming Can gather other data at the same time Dependent on capturing organisms Assume all organisms have same ability to get captured

15 Example: Our Lab on Friday will cover this in more detail!!

16 Review: 1. What are the four methods of determining population size? 2. Which method would you use if you had a small area with immobile population? 3. Which method would you use if you wanted to also study the health of the organisms? 4. Which method would you use in a large area? 5. Which method would you use if you could not easily see/find the organism? 6. Which methods are estimates? 7. Which method is most accurate?

17 Review Answers: 1. Direct Observation, Indirect Observation, Random Sampling, Mark-and-Recapture Studies 2. Direct Observation 3. Mark-and-Recapture 4. Random Sampling 5. Indirect Observation 6. Indirect Observation, Random Sampling, Mark-and- Recapture Studies 7. It depends on how each method is applied. All methods have pros and cons. You should pick the method that has the least negatives given the conditions of your study.

18 Populations can Change in Size Birth Rate- number of births in the population in a certain time. Death Rate- number of deaths in the population in a certain time. -------------------------------------------------------------------- Immigration- organisms moving into a population (not due to birth) Emigration- organisms moving out of a population (not due to death)

19 Populations can Change in Size Populations can increase in size through _________________ and ____________. Populations can decrease in size through ________________ and ____________. What is the easiest method to depict population size changes? If the birth rate is > than the death rate the population _______________. If the birth rate is < than the death rate the population _______________. What is the difference between immigration and emigration?

20 Population Density The number of individuals in an area of a specific size. Population Density = Number of Individuals Area Example: Population Density = 20 butterflies square meter 20 butterflies per square meter.

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22 Carrying Capacity The largest population an area can support. – Can be called: Equilibrium or Balance Depends on resources available, size of population, amount of resources each member is consuming.

23 Carrying Capacity Analogy

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25 Limiting Factors An environmental factor that causes a population to decrease (or not grow higher). – Examples: Food, Water, Sunlight, Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, Space, Weather Conditions

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27 What is the carrying capacity of deer on Walla Walla Island?


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