1 / 16

POPULATION DYNAMICS

POPULATION DYNAMICS. Habitat: Set. 99. 87. 75. 60. 30. 1800. Source: Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science , 1999. POPULATION DYNAMICS. POPULATION DYNAMICS. b = no. b/1000/year. R.N.I. = b - d. How do populations change over time?. Number of births Number of deaths.

ruby-small
Download Presentation

POPULATION DYNAMICS

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. POPULATION DYNAMICS

  2. Habitat: Set 99 87 75 60 30 1800 Source: Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science, 1999.

  3. POPULATION DYNAMICS

  4. POPULATION DYNAMICS

  5. b = no. b/1000/year R.N.I. = b - d How do populations change over time? • Number of births • Number of deaths • Growth rate r • R.N.I. • e.g. pop. = 10,000 • b = 2,000/yr (or 200/1,000) • d = 1,000/yr (or 100/1,000) •  r = 0.2 - 0.1 = 0.1 or 10%

  6. Doubling Time • Amount of time it would take for a population to double • in size assuming a constant r • Td = 0.7 • r • Immigration: individuals entering a population • Emigration: individuals leaving a population • e.g. b = 1,000 • d = 500 • i = 10 • e = 100 r = (0.1 - 0.05) + (0.001 - 0.01) r = 0.05 - 0.009 = 0.041 Td = 0.7 = 17 years 0.041

  7. Geometric vs Linear Growth • Starting salary of $1 for first week that then doubles each week • Paid $10 per week with an increase in salary of $10 per week.

  8. Exponent is multiplied to the population Constant amount added to the population Source: Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science, 1999.

  9. Depends on no. of offspring, their average survival rate, and how early and often reproduction takes place. Source: Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science, 1999.

  10. Source: Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science, 1999.

  11. Source: Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science, 1999.

  12. Source: Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science, 1999.

  13. Source: Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science, 1999.

More Related