1 / 17

Please take a copy of the ‘student handbook’ from the table by the door.

Please take a copy of the ‘student handbook’ from the table by the door. Chapter 52: Population Ecology. What is a population? Individuals of a single species that occupy the same general area What is the difference between density & dispersion?

Download Presentation

Please take a copy of the ‘student handbook’ from the table by the door.

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. Please take a copy of the ‘student handbook’ from the table by the door.

  2. Chapter 52: Population Ecology • What is a population? • Individuals of a single species that occupy the same general area • What is the difference between density & dispersion? • Density – number of individuals per unit area or volume • Dispersion – pattern of spacing within the boundaries of population

  3. Births and immigration add individuals to a population. Immigration Births PopuIationsize Emigration Deaths Deaths and emigration remove individuals from a population. Figure 52.2 Population dynamics Factors that influence density….. Increase Decrease

  4. (a) Clumped. For many animals, such as thesewolves, living in groups increases theeffectiveness of hunting, spreads the workof protecting and caring for young, and helpsexclude other individuals from their territory. (c) Random. Dandelions grow from windblown seeds that land at random and later germinate. Fig. 52.3 Patterns of dispersion within a population’s geographic range (b) Uniform. Birds nesting on small islands, suchas these king penguins on South Georgia Islandin the South Atlantic Ocean, often exhibit uniformspacing, maintained by aggressive interactionsbetween neighbors.

  5. Chapter 52: Population Ecology • What is a population? • Individuals of a single species that occupy the same general area • What is the difference between density & dispersion? • Density – number of individuals per unit area or volume • Dispersion – pattern of spacing within the boundaries of population • What factors influence population size? • Birth rate – fecundity • Death rate • Generation time • Sex ratio • 4. What do the survivorship curves mean?

  6. 1,000 I 100 II Number of survivors (log scale) 10 III 1 100 50 0 Percentage of maximum life span Figure 52.5 Idealized survivorship curves: Types I, II, and III Type I – most born survive & live to their maximum life span – us – k-selected Type II – constant death rate – each day has an equal opportunity for life or death Type III – high early death rate but survivors live to maximum life span – r-selected

  7. Chapter 52: Population Ecology • What is a population? • What is the difference between density & dispersion? • What factors influence population size? • What do the survivorship curves mean? • What are the 2 main population growth curves? • - Exponential – “J”-curve

  8. 2,000 dN  1.0N dt 1,500 dN  0.5N dt Population size (N) 1,000 500 0 0 10 15 5 Number of generations Figure 52.9 Population growth predicted by the exponential model dN = Δ population size dt = Δ time rmax = Births – deaths (intrinsic rate of increase) N = population size

  9. Chapter 52: Population Ecology • What is a population? • What is the difference between density & dispersion? • What factors influence population size? • What do the survivorship curves mean? • What are the 2 main populations growth curves? • Exponential • Logistic

  10. 2,000 dN  1.0N Exponential growth dt 1,500 K  1,500 Logistic growth Population size (N) 1,000 dN 1,500  N  1.0N dt 1,500 500 0 0 5 10 15 Number of generations Figure 52.12 Population growth predicted by the logistic model K = carrying capacity

  11. Chapter 52: Population Ecology • What is a population? • What is the difference between density & dispersion? • What factors influence population size? • What do the survivorship curves mean? • What are the 2 main populations growth curves? • What is the difference between r-selected & k-selected species? • r-selected (generalists) k-selected (equilibrial) • Maturation time: short long • Lifespan: short long • Death rate high low • Offspring/episode: many few • Size of offspring/eggs: small large • Parental care: none extensive • Timing of 1st reproduction: early late in life • Reproductions/lifetime: usually 1 several • Examples: insects, fish, frogs mammals, birds • 7. What factors limit a population?

  12. Chapter 52: Population Ecology • What is a population? • What is the difference between density & dispersion? • What factors influence population size? • What do the survivorship curves mean? • What are the 2 main populations growth curves? • What is the difference between r-selected & k-selected species? • 7. What factors limit a population? • Density – dependent factors – intensify as population size increases • Resource limitation • Health • Predation • Waste accumulation • Density – independent factors – effect population regardless of density • Weather • Climate • Environmental disasters

  13. Snowshoe hare 160 120 Lynx 9 Lynx population size (thousands) Hare population size (thousands) 80 6 40 3 0 0 1850 1875 1900 1925 Year Figure 52.21 Population cycles in the snowshoe hare and lynx

  14. Chapter 52: Population Ecology • What is a population? • What is the difference between density & dispersion? • What factors influence population size? • What do the survivorship curves mean? • What are the 2 main populations growth curves? • What is the difference between r-selected & k-selected species? • What factors limit a population? • Human population overview…

  15. 6 5 4 Human population (billions) 3 2 The Plague 1 0 8000 B.C. 4000 B.C. 3000 B.C. 2000 B.C. 1000 B.C. 0 1000 A.D. 2000 A.D. Figure 52.22 Human population growth (data as of 2003)

  16. Rapid growth Afghanistan Decrease Italy Slow growth United States Male Female Female Male Male Age Age Female 85 85 80–84 80–84 75–79 75–79 70–74 70–74 65–69 65–69 60–64 60–64 55–59 55–59 50–54 50–54 45–49 45–49 40–44 40–44 35–39 35–39 30–34 30–34 25–29 25–29 20–24 20–24 15–19 15–19 10–14 10–14 5–9 5–9 0–4 0–4 8 8 8 6 6 6 4 4 4 2 2 2 0 0 0 2 2 2 4 4 4 6 6 6 8 8 8 Percent of population Percent of population Percent of population Figure 52.25 Age-structure pyramids for the human population of three countries (data as of 2003) Group NOT making babies Group making babies Babies Wide base = rapid growth Same width = slow growth Narrow base = decreasing

  17. We are now done with Ch. 1, 50, 51, & 52. Do your learning logs! Ch. 1, 50, 51, & 52 learning logs are due on MONDAY!

More Related