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Populations 1 Population Parameters Population growth

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Chapters 9 & 10 (pp 133-136 only) Krebs Ecology. 2. Populations 1 ... Porcupine Caribou Herd. Population of unitary organisms. 14. Modular organisms. Genet ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Populations 1 Population Parameters Population growth


1
Populations 1-Population ParametersPopulation
growth
Readings Chapters 9 10 (pp 133-136 only) Krebs
Ecology
2
Populations 1 - Population Parameters I.
Definition of Population II. Key Population
Parameters III. Measuring Populations 1.
Density 2. Natality 3. Mortality 4.
Immigration and emigration
3
I. Definition of Population
  • A population is a group of organisms of the same
    species that occupy a particular space at a
    particular time
  • Deme the breeding population

4
What defines a population?
5
Individuals vs. Populations
Light, water, temperature
Habitat
Competition
Chemical factors
Individuals - each genetically different
Dispersal
Natural Selection
Population range of genetic characteristics
6
Phenotype (bill size)
7
Populations 1 - Population Parameters I.
Definition of Population II. Key Population
Parameters III. Measuring Populations 1.
Density 2. Natality 3. Mortality 4.
Immigration and emigration
8
Population Parameters
  • Density Number of organisms per unit space
    (area or volume)
  • Natality the reproductive output of a
    population per unit time
  • Mortality the number of deaths in a population
    per unit time
  • Immigration the number of individuals moving
    into the area occupied by the population per
    unit time
  • Emigration the number of individuals moving
    out of the area occupied by the population per
    unit time

9
II. Key Population Parameters
Births (Natality)

Density (individuals per unit area)
Emigration
Immigration
-

-
Deaths (mortality
10
Population Equation
  • Change in Population (Density) in a stated time
  • (Natality Immigration) Per unit time
  • -
  • (Mortality Emigration) Per unit time

11
Populations 1 - Population Parameters I.
Definition of Population II. Key Population
Parameters III. Measuring Populations 1.
Density 2. Natality 3. Mortality 4.
Immigration and emigration
12
1. Density
  • Unitary versus modular organisms
  • Modular organisms
  • Some modular organisms are part of a single
    organism unit, others are not
  • Ramets modular organisms that can exist
    independent of a modular form
  • Genets individuals that are represented by
    original zygotes have the same genetic
    signatures

13
Porcupine Caribou Herd
Population of unitary organisms
14
Modular organisms
Genet
Ramets
15
Modular animals
16
Aspen (Populus tremeloides) in boreal forest
17
Aspen (Populus tremeloides) in boreal forest
18
Counting Populations
  • Total counts
  • Sampling methods
  • Use of quadrats
  • Catch and release

19
Issues in using quadrats
  • Individuals vs. modules
  • Distribution of populations and individuals
  • Adequate quadrat size
  • Adequate sample size
  • Random sampling
  • Studying populations over time

20
Quadrat sampling of grassland

21
Point quadrat sampling of grassland
22
Quadrat sampling of grassland

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Mean Standard Deviation Chestnut
oak 1000 241 Sugar maple 242
69 American beech 667 69
25
Catch and Release Approach
26
Catch and Release Approach
27
Estimating Population Sizethrough
capture/recapture
  • N actual size of the study population
  • M total number of individuals caught in the
    first capture, marked and released
  • n total number of individuals in the second
    capture
  • m total number of marked individuals in the
    second capture
  • M/N m/n or N Mn/m

28
Capture/Recapture Example
  • Sampling of trout in small lakes
  • Can mark trout by clipping a fin
  • M 109 fish caught in first sample and marked
  • n 177 caught in second sample
  • M 57 marked fish in second sample
  • N Mn/m 109177/57 338 trout

29
Northern Humpback Whale
  • N actual size of the study population
  • M total number of individuals caught in the
    first capture, marked and released
  • n total number of individuals in the second
    capture
  • m total number of marked individuals in the
    second capture
  • M/N m/n or N Mn/m
  • Whale studies in Frederick Sound, Alaska
  • Two sample periods July 31 to August 3 1986 and
    August 29 to September 1 1986
  • M 72, n 78, m 22
  • N 7278/22 255

30
Assumptions for Capture/Recapture Models
  • Marked and unmarked animals are captured randomly
  • Marked animals are subject to the same mortality
    as unmarked animals (Petersen model assumes no
    mortality between samples)
  • Marked animals are neither lost nor overlooked

31
Relative Density Indices
  • Traps number of individuals caught in a trap
    per day
  • Fecal pellets know number of pellets produced
    per individual per day
  • Vocalization frequency used for birds
  • Pelt records population size changes in animals

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Relative Density Indices
  • Catch per unit fishing effort
  • Number of artifacts e.g., number of nests, egg
    shells, etc.
  • Questionaires
  • Relative plant cover
  • Feeding capacity consumption of bait
  • Roadside counts common for birds
  • Sightings
  • Vovalization
  • Faecal counts
  • Tracks

34
Populations 1 - Population Parameters I.
Definition of Population II. Key Population
Parameters III. Measuring Populations 1.
Density 2. Natality 3. Mortality 4.
Immigration and emigration
35
2. Natality
  • Natality refers to the production of new
    individuals
  • birth, hatching, germination, or fission
  • Fecundity and fertility are important aspects of
    natality

36
3. Mortality
  • Rate at which individual organisms die
  • Issues with respect to mortality
  • Why do individuals die?
  • Why do individuals die at different ages?
  • What influences longevity?

37
Measuring mortality
  • Direct Monitor the death rates of actual
    individuals through direct observation or
    capture/recapture methods
  • Indirect monitor the abundance of successive
    age groups

38
4. Immigration/Emigration
  • In most populations studies, it is assumed that
    immigration emigration

39
Important characteristics of populations
  • In addition to counting numbers of individuals,
    population studies also look at characteristics
    of the individuals
  • Most common are age, size, and sex of individuals
  • Other characteristics are often measured as well

40
Populations 1 - Population Parameters I.
Definition of Population II. Key Population
Parameters III. Measuring Populations 1.
Density 2. Natality 3. Mortality 4.
Immigration and emigration IV. Life Tables 1.
Diagrammatic and tabular 2. Static and cohort
life tables 3. Dynamic population parameters
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46
Life Tables Reading Chapter 10, Krebs.
47
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49
Number of individuals dying
  • dx the number of individuals dying during the
    age interval from x to x1
  • dx nx nx1

50
Example cohort life table sparrows
51
Mortality rate
  • qx per capita rate of mortality during the age
    interval of x to x1
  • qx dx / nx

52
Example cohort life table sparrows
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Patterns of survivorship
  • Pearl was the ecologist who introduced life
    tables to ecology
  • Showed three patterns of mortality
  • 1. Low early in life, high later in life
  • 2. Constant mortality
  • 3. High early in life, low later in life

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Static Life Table
  • Another form of a life table is the static life
    table
  • In this case, a group of cohorts is not sampled,
    but instead a life table is created by sampling a
    population for number of individuals in each age
    group (nx) and the deaths in each age group (dx)
  • Use these data to estimate mortality rate (qx)

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Why use a static life table?
  • It is not always possible to follow a population
    of cohorts throughout their entire lifetime
  • Examples
  • migrating fish (salmon)
  • humans

59
Do cohort and static life tables give the same
information?
  • Only if the conditions to which the population is
    exposed that influence mortality and survivorship
    stay constant
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