Chpt 53 Notes
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Transcript Chpt 53 Notes
Chapter 53- AP Biology
The study of populations in relation to their environment
Explores how biotic and abiotic factors influence the density, distribution, size and
age structure of populations
What is a population?
Density: number of individuals per unit area or volume
Ex: number of oak trees per square kilometer in the Minnesota country
Dispersion:
Random
Clumped- most common pattern of dispersion (plants, fungi)
Uniform – often seen with territoriality
5 moose in a township (24,000 square miles)
10,000 Oak trees in 25 square miles
Demography: study of the vital statistics of populations and how they change over
time
Life Tables (Usually follow certain “cohorts”): death rate, birthrate, etc.
Survivorship curves
Reproductive Rates
Type I: few offspring but
provided with good care; low
infant death rate
Type II: Intermediate; death
rate remains constant over
time
Type III: many offspring with
a high infant mortality; fish,
oysters, etc.
Natural selection favors traits that improve an organism’s chances of survival and
reproductive success.
“Life history traits are evolutionary outcomes reflected in their development,
physiology, and behavior”
Semelparity: “beget once,” organism produces once in its lifetime (salmon, agave)
Iteroparity: “repeted,” reproducing many times in a lifetime (humans, dogs)
Two critical factors
Survival rate of the offspring
Likelihood that the adult will survive to reproduce once again
Population
during a
time interval
Births
=
and
immigrants
simplified: Δ N/ Δ t = B-D
Deaths
-
and
emigrants
“Average births or deaths per unit of time in average population”
Example: 34 births per year in a population of 1,000 (or 34/1,000)
annual per capita birth rate b = .034
50 deaths per year in a population of 1,000
annual per capita death rate d = .05
In the equation Δ N/ Δ t = B-D
B = bN and D = dN
(r)
r=b–d
if (r > 0 ), then population is growing
if (r < 0 ), then population is declining
Zero growth population (ZGP) is when r = 0
Δ N/ Δ t = rN
Under “perfect conditions,” with abundant resources, a population will grow
“without limit”
Δ N/ Δ t = rmaxN
Result is a “J” curve
Greater ( r) means faster growth
Grew exponentially for 60 years when they were first protected from hunting
In 2006, the United States had a population of about 300
million people. If there were 14 births and 8 deaths per
1,000 people, what was the country’s net population growth
that year (ignoring immigration and emigration)?
In 2006, the United States had a population of about 300 million
people. If there were 14 births and 8 deaths per 1,000 people, what
was the country’s net population growth that year (ignoring
immigration and emigration)?
b
8/1000 = .008 = annual per capita death rate d
14/1000 = .014 = annual per capita birth rate
b – d = .006 annual per capita growth rate
.006 x 300 million = 1,800,000 net growth in 1 year
Carrying Capacity (k): the maximum population
size that a particular environment can sustain
Varies over time
Depends on limiting factors
Result = change in r
Logistic growth: per capita rate of increase (r )
approaches zero as carrying capacity (k) is
reached
“as N increases, r decreases”
k-selection: density-dependent selection, select
for traits that are sensitive to population density;
(when organisms are near carrying capacity).
r-selection: density-independent selection, select
traits that maximize reproductive success at LOW
densities
When a farmer abandons his field, it is
quickly colonized by rapidly-growing
weeds. Is this a k-selected or r-selected
species?
Density-dependent: trait or growth rate that is
affected by population density
Ex: death rate may rise due to overpopulation
Density-independent: trait or growth rate that is
NOT affected by population density
Ex: death rate may rise due to forest fires
Competition
Territoriality
Disease
Predation
Toxic wastes
Intrinsic factors (stress hormones)
Complex interactions between biotic and abiotic factors that cause
variation in the size of populations
ZGP (Stable population)
High birth rate – high death rate
OR
Low birth rate – low death rate
Demographic transition = movement towards low
birth rate and low death rate
Sanitation
Better Health Care
Improved Education access
Relative number of individuals of each age group in
a population
Estimated at 7.8 – 10.8 billion
Ecological footprint: sum of aggregate land and water area required by each
person, city, or nation to produce all the resources it consumes and absorb all the
waste it generates.
Find the density and dispersion of a given species
Interpret life tables, survivorship curves, and age structure tables
Identify and describe “r” strategists and “k” strategists
Interpret logistic and exponential population growth models
Identify and describe density-dependent and density-independent factors