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Learning Target: Population Density & Distribution Ch. 14.3 (pp. 436 – 439)

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Presentation on theme: "Learning Target: Population Density & Distribution Ch. 14.3 (pp. 436 – 439)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Learning Target: Population Density & Distribution Ch. 14.3 (pp. 436 – 439)

2 I Can…E xplain how population density, dispersion patterns and survivorship curves, affect the reproductive strategies of a species. I Will… Calculate the density of a population of organisms in a given area. Describe the dispersion pattern of organisms in a given area. Infer what type of intraspecies and interspecies relationships cause specific patterns of dispersion. Describe the three types of survivorship curves. Infer connections between survivorship curves and reproductive strategies.

3 KEY CONCEPT: Each population has a density, a dispersion pattern, and a reproductive strategy. Population density – is a measurement of the average number of individuals in a defined space. # of individuals = Population density Area (units 2 ) e.g. 28 turkeys in a field of 4-square acres is 28 turkeys = 7 turkeys / acre 2 or 7 turkeys 4 acres 2 per square-acre NOTE: the unit is squared NOT the number before the unit

4 Population dispersion – the way in which individuals of a population are spread in an area or volume. Clumped dispersion – individuals live close together in order to facilitate mating, gain protection, or access food resources.

5 Uniform dispersion – Territoriality and intraspecies (within species) competition for limited resources leads to individuals living at specific distances from one another.

6 Random dispersion – Individuals are spread randomly within an area or volume. Species often solitary with few competitors and few natural predators.

7 Survivorship curve – generalized diagram showing the number of surviving members over time from a measured set of births. Type I – low level of infant mortality (death) and population survives to old age. Common in large mammals and humans.

8 Survivorship curve Type II – Survivorship rate is equal at all ages of an organism’s life. (Equal chance of living or dying at anytime) Common in birds, small mammals, and reptiles.

9 Survivorship curve Type III – Very high birthrate and very high infant mortality (death) rate. Common in invertebrates (no backbone), fish, amphibians, and plants

10 Survivorship curve Reproductive strategy – reproductive practice that provides a survival strategy for a species. e.g. Fish (Type III) lay hundreds of eggs to ensure at least some offspring reach adulthood without being eaten and are able to reproduce.


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