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Studying Populations Geographic Range – varies greatly by species Density and Distribution-number of individuals per unit area Growth Rate – depends on deaths, births, immigration and emigration Age Structure-males, females, old, young, babies,
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Sampling Populations Random Sampling – count a random distribution of individuals/species Why random- to avoid human influences Count a certain number of grids and apply to entire area Population density 85 plantains in 24 square feet- how many in one foot 85 plantains/24 = ?
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Practice – Population Density An ecologist determines the population of spotted knapweed to be 10,000. The area under study is 14 square kilometers. What is the population density? A small town in Texas covers 14 square kilometers. There are 420 individuals who live within town limits. What is the population density of this town?
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Mark and Recapture Used for animals that move portion of the population is captured, marked, and released. Later, another portion is captured and the number of marked individuals within the sample is counted. Marked is assumed to be proportional to population
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Practice 15 deer are caught and marked. Over time biologist capture and count 100 deer, of those deer five have a mark Total captured (total originally marked) Total with a mark upon recapture What is the answer- Ten years later the biologist repeat the study- again 15 deer are caught and marked. 100 deer are recaptured and 15 have a mark. What is the answer? What happened to the population?
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Types of Growth Exponential Growth – under ideal conditions with unlimited resources, a population will grow exponentially (doubles)
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Rapid Reproduction One of the fastest growing bacteria is Bacillus cereus, which divides approximately every 11 minutes- Even slower can divide every 20 minutes. A bacterial population can grow to 4,720,000,000,000,000,000,000 in one day!
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Logistic Growth- why would growth slow down?
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Carrying Capacity Maximum number of individuals an environment can support.
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Limiting Factors
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Density-Dependent Limiting Factors Operate when the population density reaches a certain level. Predation, herbivory, parasitism, disease, and stress from overcrowding
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Density Independent Limiting Factors Density does not influence Affects all populations in similar ways Examples – wildfires, hurricanes, droughts, cold, cold, cold winters
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World Population Growth 7 billion in the World 300 million in the United States 1 million in Montana 30,000 in Helena, Montana
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Patterns of Human Population Growth Follow Development- Initially high birth and death rates Advances in sanitation/nutrition/healthcare – results in lower death rate Education and living standards generally decrease birth rate.
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Examples India Second most populous country in the world China is first Experiencing Exponential growth Japan Actually losing population –
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Population Age Structure Used to predict how it can grow- Uses- # of people of reproductive age # of people nearing death (old) Birth rates and death rates Immigration and emigration Why would this be important for humans to know the age structure?
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