11-15-2010 APES 08 PP Population Ecology
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Transcript 11-15-2010 APES 08 PP Population Ecology
Population Ecology
Native species
species that normally live in a particular community
Nonnative species
also referred to as “invasive” or “alien” species
species that enter a new community either through
immigration or introduction
Introduction may be deliberate or accidental
i.e. “killer bees,” Kudzu, zebra mussels, Asian oysters,
domesticated animals
species whose decline or migration indicates a
significant change (damage) to a particular
community
Serve as “early warning sentinels” of
environmental degradation
Examples:
Amphibians
Trout
Birds
Aquatic macroinvertebrates
species whose removal from its community may
dramatically alter the structure and function of the
community
roles:
pollinators
top predators
decomposers
species that alters its habitat
in ways that benefit other
species
behaviors of such species may
influence succession and
increase species richness
sometimes identical to the
keystone species, while other
times serves as a counterbalance
Examples: elephants, kelp,
eastern hemlock, mussels
Three general patterns: (see below)
Most populations live in clumps although other patterns
occur based on resource distribution.
Figure 8-2
Resource availability varies from place to place.
2. Living in herds, flocks, or schools provides
protection from predators and population declines.
1.
Fish, birds, caribou, antelope, zebra
Predators that live in groups are afforded a better
chance of catching prey and getting a meal.
3.
Wolves, hunting dogs
Temporary animal groupings may occur for mating
and caring for young.
4.
Dolphin, albatross
Populations increase through births and immigration
Populations decrease through deaths and emigration
How fast a population grows or declines depends on its
age structure.
Prereproductive age: not mature enough to reproduce.
Reproductive age: those capable of reproduction.
Postreproductive age: those too old to reproduce.
Populations with mostly reproductive individuals tend
to increase.
Populations with mostly post-reproductive individuals
tend to decrease.
Stable populations are equitability distributed among all
three categories.
No population can increase its size indefinitely. There are
always limits to population growth in nature.
Population change is a balance between:
Biotic potential - the intrinsic rate of increase (r) or the rate at
which a population would grow if it had unlimited resources
and…
Environmental resistance – all the factors that act to limit the
growth of a population.
Together these determine a populations carrying capacity (K):
the maximum population of a given species that a particular
habitat can sustain indefinitely without degrading the habitat.
Exponential or geometric growth – starts slowly but
accelerates rapidly as population increases
J-shaped curve plotted on a graph of population vs. time
Logistic growth – exponential growth followed by a
steady population decrease until the population size
levels off
S-shaped curve
Usually levels off at or near the carrying capacity
Carrying capacity is not fixed
Environmental
Resistance
Carrying capacity (K)
Biotic
Potential
Exponential
Growth
Time (t)
Fig. 8-3, p. 163
Exhibit four phases
Lag – phase characterized by low birth rates, when the
population is adjusting to a new environment
Growth – phase which shows a dramatic increase in
population size (B+I > D+E)
Stationary – phase when then population is in dynamic
equilibrium (B+I = D+E)
Death – phase in which the population declines
(B+I < D+E)
Members of populations which exceed their resources
will die unless they adapt or move to an area with more
resources.
Some populations overshoot their carrying capacity.
Reproductive time lag
Causes a dieback or a crash
Some populations may increase their carrying capacity
by developing adaptive traits (i.e. natural selection)
Some species maintain their carrying capacity by
migrating to other areas.
Overshoot
Number of sheep (millions)
Carrying capacity
Year
Fig. 8-4, p. 164
Number of reindeer
Population
overshoots
carrying
capacity
Population
Crashes
Carrying
capacity
Year
Fig. 8-6, p. 165
Population density: the number of individuals in a
population found in a particular area or volume.
A population’s density can affect how rapidly it can grow or
decline.
Density dependent factors include biotic factors like disease,
competition for resources, predation, and parasitism
Some population control factors are not affected by
population density.
Density independent factors include abiotic factors like weather,
fire, pollution, and habitat destruction
Population sizes may stay the same, increase, decrease,
vary in regular cycles, or change erratically.
Stable: fluctuates slightly above and below carrying
capacity.
Irruptive: populations explode and then crash to a more
stable level.
short-lived, rapidly reproducing species (i.e. algae, insects)
Cyclic: populations fluctuate according to regular cyclic or
boom- and-bust cycles.
close predator-prey interactions
Irregular: erratic changes possibly due to chaos or drastic
change.
populations that inhabit unstable or highly variable
environments
Population size (thousands)
Hare
Lynx
Year
Fig. 8-7, p. 166
Some species reproduce without having sex (asexual).
Offspring are exact genetic copies (clones).
Others reproduce by having sex (sexual).
Genetic material is mixture of two individuals.
Disadvantages: males do not give birth, increase chance
of genetic errors and defects, courtship and mating
rituals can be costly (energetically).
Major advantages: promotes genetic diversity, division of
labor among the sexes may provide offspring greater
protection through critical periods.
r-selected species:
Large number of
smaller offspring with
little parental care
K-selected species:
Fewer, larger offspring
with higher invested
parental care
Figure 8-9
r-selected species tend to be opportunists while K-selected
species tend to be competitors.
Figure 8-10
The way to represent the age structure of a population is
Number of individuals
with a survivorship curve.
age
Late loss population live to an old age.
Constant loss population die at all ages.
Most members of early loss populations, die at young ages.
Population Ecology. (1998) Cyber Ed.