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A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. So is a lot. Albert Einstein

A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. So is a lot. Albert Einstein. Population Dynamics . Focus on births (B) & deaths (D) B = bN t , where b = per capita rate (births per individual per time) D = dN t. N = bN t – dN t = (b-d)N t. Exponential Growth .

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A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. So is a lot. Albert Einstein

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  1. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. So is a lot. Albert Einstein

  2. Population Dynamics • Focus on births (B) & deaths (D) • B = bNt , where b = per capita rate (births per individual per time) • D = dNt • N = bNt – dNt = (b-d)Nt

  3. Exponential Growth • Density-independent growth models • Discrete birth intervals (Birth Pulse) • vs. • Continuous breeding (Birth Flow)

  4.  > 1 •  < 1 •  = 1 Nt = N0 t

  5. Geometric Growth • When generations do not overlap, growth can be modeled geometrically. Nt = Noλt • Nt = Number of individuals at time t. • No = Initial number of individuals. • λ = Geometric rate of increase. • t = Number of time intervals or generations.

  6. Exponential Growth • Birth Pulse Population (Geometric Growth) • e.g., woodchucks • (10 individuals to 20 indivuals) • N0 = 10, N1 = 20 • N1 =  N0 , • where  = growth multiplier = finite rate of increase  > 1 increase  < 1 decrease  = 1 stable population

  7. Exponential Growth • Birth Pulse Population • N2 = 40 = N1  • N2 = (N0  ) = N0 2 • Nt = N0 t • Nt+1 = Nt 

  8. Exponential Growth • Density-independent growth models • Discrete birth intervals (Birth Pulse) • vs. • Continuous breeding (Birth Flow)

  9. Exponential Growth • Continuous population growth in an unlimited environment can be modeled exponentially. dN / dt = rN • Appropriate for populations with overlapping generations. • As population size (N) increases, rate of population increase (dN/dt) gets larger.

  10. Exponential Growth • For an exponentially growing population, size at any time can be calculated as: Nt = Noert • Nt = Number individuals at time t. • N0 = Initial number of individuals. • e = Base of natural logarithms =2.718281828459 • r = Per capita rate of increase. • t = Number of time intervals.

  11. Exponential Population Growth

  12. Exponential Population Growth

  13. Nt = N0ert Difference Eqn Note: λ = er

  14. Exponential growth and change over time N = N0ert dN/dt = rN Number (N) Slope (dN/dt) Time (t) Number (N) Slope = (change in N) / (change in time) = dN / dt

  15. ON THE MEANING OF r • rm - intrinsic rate of increase – unlimited • resourses • rmax– absolute maximal rm • - also called rc = observed r > 0 r < 0 r = 0

  16. Intrinsic Rates of Increase • On average, small organisms have higher rates of per capita increase and more variable populations than large organisms.

  17. Growth of a Whale Population • Pacific gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus) divided into Western and Eastern Pacific subpopulations. • Rice and Wolman estimated average annual mortality rate of 0.089 and calculated annual birth rate of 0.13. 0.13 - 0.089 = 0.041 • Gray Whale population growing at 4.1% per yr.

  18. Growth of a Whale Population • Reilly et.al. used annual migration counts from 1967-1980 to obtain 2.5% growth rate. • Thus from 1967-1980, pattern of growth in California gray whale population fit the exponential model: Nt = Noe0.025t

  19. What values of λ allow Population Growth Stable Population Size Population Decline What values of r allow Population Growth Stable Population Size Population Decline • λ > 1.0 • r > 0 • λ = 1.0 • r = 0 • λ < 1.0 • r < 0

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  21. Logistic Population Growth • As resources are depleted, population growth rate slows and eventually stops • Sigmoid (S-shaped) population growth curve • Carrying capacity (K): number of individuals of a population the environment can support • Finite amount of resources can only support a finite number of individuals

  22. Logistic Population Growth

  23. Logistic Population Growth dN/dt = rN(1-N/K) • r = per capita rate of increase • When N nears K, the right side of the equation nears zero • As population size increases, logistic growth rate becomes a small fraction of growth rate • Highest when N=K/2 • N/K = Environmental resistance

  24. Exponential & Logistic Growth(J & S Curve)

  25. Logistic Growth

  26. Actual Growth

  27. Populations Fluctuate

  28. Limits to Population Growth • Environment limits population growth by altering birth and death rates • Density-dependent factors • Disease, Resource competition • Density-independent factors • Natural disasters

  29. Galapagos Finch Population Growth

  30. Logistic Population Model Nt = 2, R = 0.15, K = 450 A. Discrete equation - Built in time lag = 1 - Nt+1 depends on Nt

  31. I. Logistic Population Model B. Density Dependence

  32. Logistic Population ModelC. Assumptions • No immigration or emigration • No age or stage structure to influence births and deaths • No genetic structure to influence births and deaths • No time lags in continuous model

  33. K Logistic Population ModelC. Assumptions • Linear relationship of per capita growth rate and population size (linear DD)

  34. Logistic Population ModelC. Assumptions • Linear relationship of per capita growth rate and population size (linear DD) • Constant carrying capacity – availability of resources is constant in time and space • Reality?

  35. I. Logistic Population Model Discrete equation Nt = 2, r = 1.9, K = 450 Damped Oscillations r <2.0

  36. I. Logistic Population Model Discrete equation Nt = 2, r = 2.5, K = 450 Stable Limit Cycles 2.0 < r < 2.57 * K = midpoint

  37. I. Logistic Population Model Discrete equation Nt = 2, r = 2.9, K = 450 • Chaos • r > 2.57 • Not random • change • Due to DD • feedback and time • lag in model

  38. Underpopulation or Allee Effect • Opposite type of DD • population size down and population growth down b=d b=d d Vital rate b b<d r<0 N* K N

  39. Review of Logistic Population ModelD. Deterministic vs. Stochastic Models Nt = 1, r = 2, K = 100 * Parameters set deterministic behavior same

  40. Nt = 1, r = 0.15, SD = 0.1; K = 100, SD = 20 Review of Logistic Population ModelD. Deterministic vs. Stochastic Models * Stochastic model, r and K change at random each time step

  41. Nt = 1, r = 0.15, SD = 0.1; K = 100, SD = 20 Review of Logistic Population ModelD. Deterministic vs. Stochastic Models * Stochastic model

  42. Nt = 1, r = 0.15, SD = 0.1; K = 100, SD = 20 Review of Logistic Population ModelD. Deterministic vs. Stochastic Models * Stochastic model

  43. Environmental StochasticityA. Defined • Unpredictable change in environment occurring in time & space • Random “good” or “bad” years in terms of changes in r and/or K • Random variation in environmental conditions in separate populations • Catastrophes = extreme form of environmental variation such as floods, fires, droughts • High variability can lead to dramatic fluctuations in populations, perhaps leading to extinction

  44. Environmental StochasticityA. Defined • Unpredictable change in environment occurring in time & space • Random “good” or “bad” years in terms of changes in r and/or K • Random variation in environmental conditions in separate populations • Catastrophes = extreme form of environmental variation such as floods, fires, droughts • High variability can lead to dramatic fluctuations in populations, perhaps leading to extinction

  45. Environmental StochasticityA. Defined • Unpredictable change in environment occurring in time & space • Random “good” or “bad” years in terms of changes in r and/or K • Random variation in environmental conditions in separate populations • Catastrophes = extreme form of environmental variation such as floods, fires, droughts • High variability can lead to dramatic fluctuations in populations, perhaps leading to extinction

  46. Environmental StochasiticityB. Examples – variable fecundity Relation Dec-Apr rainfall and number of juvenile California quail per adult (Botsford et al. 1988 in Akcakaya et al. 1999)

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