1 / 17

EK 4.A.5 Communities are composed of populations of organisms that interact in complex ways

EK 4.A.5 Communities are composed of populations of organisms that interact in complex ways. Data Analysis and Mathematical Models. Populations. Size is usually designated as N (total number of individuals) Density – total number of individuals per area or volume

mandy
Download Presentation

EK 4.A.5 Communities are composed of populations of organisms that interact in complex ways

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EK 4.A.5 Communities are composed of populations of organisms that interact in complex ways Data Analysis and Mathematical Models

  2. Populations • Size is usually designated as N (total number of individuals) • Density – total number of individuals per area or volume • Dispersion – how individuals in a population are distributed

  3. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Age structure – is a description of the abundance of individuals of each age • Rapid growth – many young, few elderly; developing countries • Slow growth – larger at the bottom that slowly narrow; the US • Zero growth – tiers of equal width; Italy

  4. Growth Patterns & Interactions • About 1,000 years ago the human population began population growth thanks to increasing the carrying capacity of our environment • Increase in food supply • Reduction in disease • Reduction in human waste • Expansion of habitat

  5. Growth Patterns and Interactions • Survivorship Curves describe how mortality of individuals in a species varies during their lifetimes • 3 types of curves • Type 1 • Type 2 • Type 3

  6. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Type 1 Survivorship describe species in which most individuals live to middle age; after that mortality is high • Examples: Humans, Elephants

  7. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Type 2 Survivorship describes organisms in which the length of survivorship is random, that is, the likelihood of death is the same at any age – constant death rate • Examples: Rodents and invertebrates

  8. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Type 3 Survivorship describe species in which most individuals die young, with only a relative few surviving to reproductive age and beyond • Examples: oysters, plants, free-swimming larvae, frogs

  9. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Biotic Potential is the maximum growth rate of a population under ideal conditions • Take into consideration the following: • Age at reproductive maturity • Clutch size • Frequency of reproduction • Reproductive lifetime • Survivorship of offspring to reproductive maturity

  10. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Limits to Growth • Density-Dependent factors are those factors whose limiting effect becomes more intense as the population density increases • Examples – parasite & disease transmission; competition for resources; predation

  11. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Limiting Growth Factors • Density-Independent factors occur independently of the density of the population • Examples – natural disasters such as fires, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions; extreme climates such as storms and frosts

  12. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Exponential Growth in a population occurs whenever the reproductive rate is greater than zero. • Producing a J shaped curve • G=rN • G stands for growth, r stands for the per capita rate of increase, and N stands for the population size

  13. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Logistic Growth occurs when limiting factors restrict the size of the population to the carrying capacity of the habitat • Producing a S shaped curve • G=rN*(K-N)/K • K stands for the carrying capacity; as N approaches K the growth rate is slowed, eventually reaching zero growth

  14. Growth Patterns & Interactions • Exponential and logistic growth patterns are associated with two kinds of life-history strategies: • R-selected species • K-selected species

  15. Growth Patterns & Interactions • R-selected species – • Rapid growth (J shaped curve) • Opportunistic species – grasses and insects • Quickly invade a habitat and reproduce immediately (after reproducing they die) • Produce many offspring that are small, mature quickly and require little if any parental care

  16. Growth Patterns & Interactions • K selected species • Population size remains relatively constant at carrying capacity, K – s shaped curve • Produce few offspring that are larger in size and require extensive parental care • Reproduction occurs repeatedly during their lifetime

  17. Growth Patterns & Interactions

More Related