Chapter 14. What is a population? A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given...

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POPULATION ECOLOGY Chapter 14

Transcript of Chapter 14. What is a population? A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given...

Page 1: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

POPULATION ECOLOGYChapter 14

Page 2: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

POPULATION ECOLOGY

What is a population? A group of individuals

of the same species that live in a given area

Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could be just Spearfish or United States

Population Ecology Changes in a

population and the biotic and abiotic factors that influence those changes

Page 3: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

Organism

Population

Community

Ecosystem

Page 4: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.
Page 5: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

POPULATION DISPERSION PATTERNS

Population density # ind of a population/

unit area or volume Clumped dispersion Uniform dispersion Random dispersion

Page 6: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

WHAT DISPERSION PATTERN WOULD YOU PREDICT FOR A TERRITORIAL CHIPMUNK SPECIES?

a) Clumpedb) Uniformc) Random

Page 7: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

•Maximized rate with perfect conditions•Growth rate (G) = rN = average rate of increase per individual in the population X pop size•Population size increases exponentially•Population can outstrip its resources and crash

Page 8: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

EXPONENTIAL GROWTH

Page 9: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.
Page 10: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

Resource availability limits population growth.

Population growth following the logistic model stabilizes around the carrying capacity (K) of the environment.

G = rN(K-N)/K

(K-N)/K = the closer N comes to the carrying capacity, the slower the rate of growth

Page 11: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

LOGISTIC GROWTH

Page 12: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.
Page 13: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING IS AN EXAMPLE OF A POPULATION?

A) all of the microorganisms on your skin

B) all of the species of cichlid fish in Lake Victoria

C) all of the students in your classroom D) all students attending colleges and

universities in your state E) the various plants found in prairies

in the western United States

Page 14: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

THE DECLINE OF THE NILE PERCH IN LAKE VICTORIA IN EAST AFRICA AND THE REEMERGENCE OF CICHLIDS IS AN EXCELLENT SITUATION FOR STUDY BY

A) geologists. B) ecologists. C) population ecologists. D) geographers. E) population geneticists.

Page 15: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

SUSTAINABLE RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

Page 16: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

FOOTPRINT

Page 17: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT – GHA – GLOBAL HECTARE

Page 18: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

Cockroach population - influenced by short generation time - high reproductive rate (females lay lots of eggs)

Sustainability research helps give insight into how to control populations. - mature female individuals contribute most to population growth - target females for biggest impact

Page 19: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.

LIFE TABLES AND SURVIVORSHIP

Types of survivorship curves:I = most individuals live to old ageII = equal probability of dying through out life spanIII = rapid die off of young, few individuals live to old age

Page 20: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.
Page 21: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.
Page 22: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.
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AGE STRUCTURE CAN HAVE AN IMPACT

Page 24: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.
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CONSIDER A STABLE FROG POPULATION LIVING AT CARRYING CAPACITY IN A POND. IF AN AVERAGE FEMALE PRODUCES 6,000 EGGS DURING HER LIFETIME AND AN AVERAGE OF 300 TADPOLES HATCH FROM THESE EGGS, HOW MANY OF THESE TADPOLES WILL, ON AVERAGE, SURVIVE TO REPRODUCE?

A) 0 B) 2 C) 10 to 20 D) 100 E) more than 100

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IF A POPULATION HAS A BIRTH RATE OF 40 INDIVIDUALS PER 1,000 PER YEAR AND A DEATH RATE OF 30 INDIVIDUALS PER 1,000 PER YEAR, HOW WILL THE POPULATION CHANGE EACH YEAR? (ASSUME THAT THE POPULATION IS BELOW CARRYING CAPACITY AND THAT THERE IS NO IMMIGRATION OR EMIGRATION.)

A) It will decrease by 70%. B) It will increase by 1%. C) It will increase by 5%. D) It will increase by 70%. E) It will increase by 100%.

Page 27: Chapter 14.  What is a population?  A group of individuals of the same species that live in a given area  Area is defined. Ex. Voter population could.
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READ CHAPTER 15 – ECOSYSTEMS & COMMUNITIES