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POPULATION ECOLOGY

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3. Survivorship Curves ... at which people get married, amount of education, career vs. stay at home women, ... the Earth's carrying capacity for humans. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: POPULATION ECOLOGY


1
POPULATION ECOLOGY
  • the study of populations (groups of individuals
    of the same species living in a given area) and
    their relationships with their abiotic and biotic
    environments

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  • Population size (N) is the number of individuals
    that make up the gene pool
  • Population density is the number of individuals
    that live in a defined area or volume
  • Changes in population density and number are
    affected by
  • 1. Birth rate and death rate
  • 2. Immigration and Emigration

3
Exponential Growth
  • Equation dN/dt riN
  • where d the change in, N the number of
    individuals in a population, t time, and ri
    rmax the intrinsic rate of natural increase.
  • Species that experience periods of exponential
    growth are called r-selected species. They tend
    to
  • 1. Reproduce at a young age
  • 2. Produce many small young
  • 3. Offer little parental care

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Logistic growth
  • takes into account the factors that regulate
    population growth and the concept of a carrying
    capacity (K) or the population size at which
    stabilization occurs

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  • Equation
  • dN/dt riN(K-N/K),
  • where K carrying capacity, see above for other
    variables
  • Species that show a stabilization of N are called
    K-selected. They tend to
  • 1. Reproduce later in life
  • 2. Produce fewer, larger, and more developed
    offspring.
  • 3. Provide a great deal of parental care

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  • Population regulation

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Density-dependent factors
  • Those related to the number of individuals
    present in the population.

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Density-independent factors
  • Have their effects regardless of N.

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Demography
  • the study of factors that determine the size and
    structure of populations through time. It
    involves

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1. Age structure (the number of individuals of
each age) and Sex Ratio (proportions of males to
females)
  • Age structure is important because fecundity (the
    number of offspring produced in a given time
    interval) and mortality rates vary for different
    age groups or classes.
  • Sex ratio is important in that the number of
    births is usually more closely related to the
    number of females rather than the number of
    males.

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2. A life table
  • summarizes the probability that an individual
    will survive and reproduce in any given year over
    the course of its lifetime.

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3. Survivorship Curves
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Density and Dispersion (the pattern of spacing
among individuals within the geographic
boundaries of the population
17
Determination of Density
  • Count individuals
  • Or
  • Estimate

18
Mark-recapture method
  • Equation m2/n2 n1/N
  • where
  • m2 number of marked individuals in
    the second sample
  • n2 marked unmarked in second
    sample
  • n1 number of individuals caught in the
    first sampling attempt
  • N total population size (solve for
    N)

19
Patterns of dispersion
  • clumped or with individuals aggregated in
    patches
  • uniform or evenly spaced
  • random or where the position of one individual
    is independent of other individuals).

20
Human Population Growth
21
Demographics
  • Growth rate formula Growth Rate (Crude birth
    rate - crude death rate). Crude birth rate is
    the number of births/1,000 people crude death
    rate is the number of deaths/1,000 people.
    Depends on age at which people get married,
    amount of education, career vs. stay at home
    women, contraceptive use, number of children
    desired by the couple, cultural values, and
    religious beliefs.
  • The doubling time or the time it takes for a
    population to double is calculated as follows
    Doubling time 70/Growth Rate (). Developed
    countries in general have longer doubling times
    than developing and third world nations.
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR) is the number of
    children that women are expected to have in their
    lifetimes.
  • A country reaches zero population growth when
    birth rates death rates and immigration
    emigration.
  • After a country reaches replacement level
    fertility, population growth can still occur. In
    fact worldwide the population will still continue
    to grow even if all nations reach replacement
    level fertility.
  • The age structure of a population also affects
    population growth.

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Factors involved in the human population increase
include but are not limited to
  • Expansion into new habitats.
  • Increased K. Although most living organisms
    cannot change their carrying capacities, humans
    have been able to increase theirs. There are
    many disagreements concerning the Earths
    carrying capacity for humans. Some people
    believe that we have already surpassed K, while
    others think that it may be as high as 1,000
    billion.
  • 3. Side-stepping limiting factors
  • a. Decreased infant mortality as a result of
    increased food supplies, the Agricultural
    Revolution, the Industrial Revolution, the
    technology, medicines, and sanitary living
    conditions.
  • b. Increased life spans
  • Social influences
  • Religious influences

24
Is this a problem?
  • Some say yes
  • Others say no

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But---
  • It makes since that the more people we have, the
    more impact on resources and the environment.
    However, the people of developed nations tend to
    have a larger-
  • The Ecological Footprint takes into account
    resources needed and wastes produced by humans.
    http//www.myfootprint.org/ .

26
Should or can human population be controlled?
  • Mandatory limits on number of children
  • Educational programs extolling the benefits of
    smaller families
  • Family planning
  • But all of these are controversial

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  • Another possibility is raising the standard of
    living in third world countries through
    demographic transition
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