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Standard Bf

Standard Bf. : The student will demonstrate an understanding of the interrelationships among organisms and the biotic and abiotic indicators of their environments. Chapter 15 Populations. Section 1 How Populations Grow. What is a Population?.

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Standard Bf

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  1. Standard Bf : The student will demonstrate an understanding of the interrelationships among organisms and the biotic and abiotic indicators of their environments.

  2. Chapter 15Populations Section 1 How Populations Grow

  3. What is a Population? • A population consists of all the individuals of a species that live together in one place at one time. • Demography – the statistical study of all populations • Study the composition of a population and try to predict how the size of the population will change

  4. Three Key Features of Populations • Population size – most important feature –can affect the population’s ability to survive • Population density – the number of individuals that live in a defined space • #of individuals = area(units) population density

  5. Dispersion – the way the individuals of the population are arranged in an area or a volume • Population dispersion patterns influence the rate of gene flow among and between species

  6. Gene Flow • Migration-the movement of individuals to or from a population (immigrants add alleles and emigrants subtract alleles • Gene flow the movement of alleles into or out of a population

  7. Three main patterns of dispersion are possible within a population • Randomly spaced – the location of each individual is self-determined or determined by chance within an area or volume • Evenly spaced – they are located at regular intervals – territoriality and intraspecies competition for limited resources lead to individuals living at specific distances from one another

  8. Clumped distribution – individuals are bunched together in clusters – may live close together in groups in order to facilitate mating, gain protection, or access food • Each one reflects the interactions between the population & environment

  9. Plant dispersion • Plant also exhibit the same dispersion pattern as those of animals • Most common is clumped dispersion pattern • Plants close together would compete – uniform dispersion • Random – adapted to a variety of conditions and seeds windblown

  10. Survivorship curves • Is a generalized diagram showing the number of surviving members over time from a measured set of births • Give information about the life history of a species

  11. Type I common among large mammals – behavior common –parental care • Type II – roughly equal at all ages birds, small mammals • Type III – high birth rate/ high infant mortality rate • Ex. Invertebrates, fish, plants

  12. Modeling Population Growth • Population model- a hypothetical population that attempts to exhibit the key characteristics of a real population • Demographers can predict what might occur • Three stages of complexity

  13. Tagging Monarch • Monarch Watch was formed in 1992 • Essential Question:What can we learn about migrationfrom tagged monarchs?

  14. Population grows when birthrate is greater than death rate – P.G. difference between the birthrate & the death rate • Exponential growth curve – a curve in which the rate of population growth stays the same – increase steadily • To calculate the # of individuals that will be added –multiply the size of the current pop.(N) by the rate of growth (r)

  15. Carrying capacity (K) –the population size that an environment can sustain • Carrying capacity can change when the environment changes • Population crash is a dramatic decline in the size of a population over a short period of time • Limiting factor – has the greatest effect in keeping down the size of population

  16. Density-dependent factors –the effect of limited resources will affect the population density that uses them • Competition, predation, parasitism and disease are limiting factors • Logistic model – a population model in which exponential growth is limited by a density-dependent factor

  17. Competition for food, shelter, mates, and limited resources tends to increase as a population approaches its carrying capacity • Accumulation of wastes also increases

  18. http://www.worldometers.info/

  19. Growth Patterns in Real Populations • Density-independent factors – growth limited by environmental conditions • Weather & climate are the most important • Some organisms grow exponential, while others grow logistic growth model, • Some will use both at different times as the environment changes

  20. Rapidly Growing Populations • R-strategists – grow exponentially when environmental conditions allow them to reproduce • R-strategists have short-life span, reproduce early, have many offspring which are small and mature rapidly with little or no parental care

  21. Slowly Growing Populations • K-strategists- population density is usually near the carrying capacity (K) of their environment • Long life span, slow maturing process, reproduction late in life, extensive care of their young, tend to live in stable environments

  22. Population Pyramids • http://www.china-profile.com/data/ani_ceu_pop.htm

  23. Homework P. 325 Section 1 review all questions P. 335 Questions 1-3,6,10,13,16, 18

  24. How Populations EvolveSection 2 • Hardy-Weinberg principle –the frequencies of alleles in a population do not change unless evolutionary forces act on the population • Holds true if population is big enough that members will not mate with relatives

  25. Five principle evolutionary forces: mutation, gene flow, nonrandom mating, genetic drift, and natural selection • Can cause the ratios to differ significantly from predicted by the Hardy-Weinberg principle

  26. Mutation • Mutation rates in nature are very slow • Not all mutation result in phenotype changes • Several codons can code for the same amino acid • Mutation is a source of variation

  27. Gene Flow • Migration-the movement of individuals to or from a population (immigrants add alleles and emigrants subtract alleles • Gene flow the movement of alleles into or out of a population

  28. Nonrandom Mating • Prefer to mate with others that live nearby or are of their own phenotype • Mating with relatives (inbreeding) causes a lower frequency of heterozygotes than predicted by Hardy-Weinberg principle • Also when organisms choose based on certain traits

  29. Genetic Drift • Genetic drift – the random change in allele frequency in a population • Changed by chance events causing isolation • Genetic uniformity can reduce disease resistance • Lack of genetic diversity may hasten extinction

  30. Natural Selection • Causes deviations from H-W proportions by changing frequencies of alleles • Frequency will increase or decrease, depending on allele’s effects on survival & reproduction • Sickle cell anemia in US • One of the most powerful agents of genetic change

  31. Genetic conditions are not eliminated by natural selection because very few of the individuals bearing the alleles express the recessive phenotype

  32. Natural selection enables individuals who express favorable traits to reproduce & pass those traits on – acts on phenotypes not genotypes • Selection cannot operate against rare recessive alleles unless heterozygous individuals are common & produce homozygous offspring

  33. Natural selection shapes populations affected by phenotypes that are controlled by one or by a large number of genes • Polygenic trait – a trait that is influenced by several genes • Normal distribution-a range of phenotypes clustered around an average value

  34. Directional Selection • Eliminates one extreme from a range of phenotypes, alleles for that trait become less common • Directional selection – the frequency of a particular trait moves in one direction in a range • Has a role in the evolution of a single-gene traits

  35. Stabilizing Selection • When selection reduces extremes, the frequencies of the intermediate phenotypes increase • Distribution becomes narrower tending to”stabilize” the average by increasing the proportion of similar individuals • Very common in nature

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