Population Ecology - West Windsor
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Transcript Population Ecology - West Windsor
POPULATION
ECOLOGY
WHAT IS A POPULATION?
A group of individuals of the same species
occupying a given area
Can be described by demographics
Vital statistics such as size, density,
distribution, and age structure
SOME CHARACTERISTICS OF
POPULATIONS
Density and Distribution
Number of individuals in
some specified area of
habitat
Crude density
information is more
useful if combined with
distribution data
Determining Population Size
• Direct counts are most accurate but
seldom feasible
• Can sample an area, then extrapolate
• Capture-recapture method is used for
mobile species
Assumptions in
Capture-Recapture
• Marking has no effect on mortality
• Marking has no effect on likelihood to being
captured
• There is no immigration or emigration
between sampling times
GROWTH RATES OF POPULATIONS
EXPONENTIAL GROWTH
Population size
expands by ever
increasing increments
during successive
intervals
The larger the
population gets, the
more individuals there
are to reproduce
J curve
Growth Rates of Populations
Logistic Growth
• As size of the population increases, rate of reproduction
decreases
• When the population reaches carrying capacity, population
growth ceases
Maximum
number of
individuals
that can be
sustained
in a
particular
habitat
S curve
Growth Rates of Populations
Overshooting Capacity
• Population may
temporarily increase
above carrying capacity
• Overshoot is usually
followed by a crash;
dramatic increase in
deaths
Boom and Bust Curve
WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING IS A CURVE
SHOWING THE GROWTH RATE OF THE
HUMAN POPULATION?
A. S curve
B. J curve
C. Boom and Bust Curve
D. None of the above, humans are
unique.
FACTORS THAT EFFECT POPULATION
GROWTH
Limiting Factors
Any resource that is in short supply
Which determines the
Carrying capacity of that population
Maximum number of individuals that can be
sustained in a particular habitat
Can be
Density dependent – factors that are effected
by the population density
Density independent – factors that are NOT
affected by the populations
Density-Dependent Controls
• Logistic growth equation deals with
density-dependent controls
• Limiting factors become more intense as
population size increases
• Disease, competition, parasites, toxic
effects of waste products
Density-Independent Controls
• Factors unaffected by population density
• Natural disasters or climate changes affect
large and small populations alike
WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING IS A
DENSITY INDEPENDENT FACTOR THAT
WILL AFFECT THE POPULATION OF DEER
IN NJ?
A. Tsunami
B. Tick infections
C. Cold winters
D. Number of males in the population
E. None of the above
HOW DO DIFFERENT SPECIES INTERACT
WITH EACH OTHER?
SYMBIOSIS
Parasitism
Commensalism
Mutualism
Succession
Change in the composition
of species over time
Pioneer Species
• Species that colonize barren habitats
• Lichens, small plants with brief life cycles
• Improve conditions for other species who
then replace them
Types of Succession
• Primary succession new environments
• Secondary succession communities were destroyed or
displaced
PRIMARY SUCCESSION IN ALASKA’S
GLACIER BAY REGION
Begins where nothing
ever grew before
Primary species are
those that can withstand
conditions like extreme
heat, light, nutrient poor
Soil
Ex. Lichens, moss
Fig. 40-18a, p.716
Fig. 40-18b, p.716
Fig. 40-18c, p.716
Fig. 40-18d, p.716
Fig. 40-31b, p.727
SECONDARY SUCCESSION
Anything that decimates
the landscape and
succession must begin
again. Ex. Volcanic
erruptions, fire, floods,
Clear cutting and human
interference.
Fig.
4019a,
p.717
SUCCESSION IS RAPID
Soil is present and so are some
seeds that withstood the calamity.
Fig.
4019b
,
p.7
17
Climax Community
• Stable array of species that persists
relatively unchanged over time
• Succession does not always move
predictably toward a specific climax
community; other stable communities may
persist