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POPULATION ECOLOGY

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Title: POPULATION ECOLOGY


1
POPULATION ECOLOGY
  • Chapter 53

2
Density and Dispersion
  • What is the density of a population?
  • The number of individuals per unit area
  • What are the three patterns of dispersion?

3
Clumped
  • Clumped dispersion has population occurring in
    patches
  • Increased concentration of resources leads to
    clumping
  • Defense against predators
  • e.g. schools of fish, sea stars grouping together
    where food is abundant

4
Uniform
  • Even spacing of individuals within the population
  • Diminishes competition
  • Often seen with plants, they secrete chemicals
    that prevent germination and growth of
    individuals that may compete for resources.
  • King penguins exhibit uniform spacing due to
    aggressive interactions between neighbors

5
Random
  • Spacing is varied and unpredictable
  • Occurs in the absence of strong attraction
    (concentrated resources) or strong repulsion
    (avoidance of competition) between individuals.
  • Dandelions grow where seeds randomly land

6
Estimating Population Size
  • Mark re-capture method.
  • You capture 200 grasshoppers, mark them all and
    then release them back into the wild. A few days
    later you capture 100 grasshoppers and 50 of them
    were marked. How many grasshoppers do you
    estimate are in this population?
  • N marked x total captured second time
  • number marked recaptures
  • 200 x 100/50 400

7
Demography
  • What is demography?
  • Study of vital statistics that affects population
    size

8
Survivorship Curves
  • What is a survivorship curve?
  • Plot of the numbers of a cohort that are alive at
    each age.
  • Survivorship curves are generally classified into
    three types

9
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10
Characteristics of The Three Types Seen in
Survivorship Curves
  • Type I Low death rate in early years.
  • Small clutch sizes and good care for young
  • Type II constant mortality throughout life
  • Type III large clutch size, little care for
    young high mortality rate early on in life.

11
Life Histories
  • What is the life history of an organism?
  • Traits that affect time of reproduction and
    death.
  • 1. Clutch size
  • 2. Number of reproductive episodes per
    lifetime
  • 3. Age at first reproduction

12
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13
Birds with high probability of dying have larger
clutch sizes
14
  • Number of reproductive episodes
  • Large clutch sizes mean one reproductive episode
    per life.
  • Small clutch sizes means more than one
    reproductive episode
  • Age at first reproduction is younger in large
    clutch size reproducers, they invest less energy
    in their own growth and development.

15
Exponential Growth
  • J shaped curve
  • Unlimited population growth, due to unlimited
    resources.
  • r selected populations favor the exponential
    growth curve. Seen in areas with little
    competition
  • Opportunistic species display this pattern,
    grasses, insects
  • But all populations eventually have a limit
    placed on their growth...

16
Logistic Growth
  • Limiting factors will affect the size of a
    population
  • K carrying capacity, never changes

17
Examples of logistic growth
K selected species - likely to be living at
carrying capacity, seen in areas with competition
18
  • r selected
  • short maturation time
  • short life-span
  • high death rate
  • many offspring/reproduction
  • one reproductive event
  • reproduces early in life
  • small size to offspring
  • no parental care
  • K selected
  • long maturation time
  • long lifespan
  • low death rate
  • few offspring/reproduction
  • several reproductive episodes
  • reproduces later in life
  • large sized offspring
  • parental care for young

19
Population Limiting Factors
  • Density dependent factors
  • Intensifies as population grows
  • Density independent factors
  • Affects same number of individuals regardless of
    population size.
  • A predator is which sort of limiting factor?
  • Density dependent
  • A hurricane is which sort of limiting factor?
  • Density independent

20
What sort of limiting factor is seen here?
21
Density dependent!
22
What sort of limiting factor is seen here?
23
Density independent
24
Usually more than 1 limiting factor is at work
25
  • Fluctuations in sheep population due to weather
  • Cold, wet winters weakens sheep and decreases
    food availability leading to a decrease in the
    size of the population

26
  • Moose population collapse coincided with a peak
    in the wolf population from 1975-1980
  • Second moose population collapse in 1995
    coincided with harsh winter weather which
    increased the energy needs of the animals and
    made it harder for the moose to find food

27
  • Describe the population shifts of snowshoe hare
    and lynx

28
Human Population
  • Global population is still growing but the rate
    of growth is slowing down
  • Age structures - relative numbers of individuals
    at each age. Used to tell if a population is
    increasing, decreasing or staying the same
  • birthrate, death rate, generation time and sex
    ratios, all affect interpretation of age
    structures

29
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