Chapter 8 Population Ecology
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Transcript Chapter 8 Population Ecology
Instructor R. Zamora
AP Environmental Science
Edinburg North High School
Core Case Study
Southern Sea Otters: Are
They Back From the
Brink of Extinction?
Historical abundance
and distribution:
1 million along NA
Pacific Coast
Habitat: Kelp Forests
Habits: Use tools to eat
shellfish
By early 1900s, hunted to near extinction
Fur
Viewed as competitors for shellfish
kelp forests disappeared
Keystone species
Depredates herbivorous invertebrates (e.g., sea urchins)
Maintains ecologically and economically important kelps
Recovery of otter populations
recovery of kelp forests and overall diversity
upsets commercial and recreational shellfishers
Focus of this chapter, Population dynamics – study of
how populations change in their distribution, numbers,
age structure, and density.
Focus Questions
What are the major characteristics of populations?
How do populations respond to changes in
environmental conditions?
How do species differ in their reproductive patterns?
Population Dynamics and Carrying
Capacity
Population Distribution
Three patterns of distribution or dispersion:
Clumping – most common
Uniform – when there is intense competition for resources
Random – least common
Four reasons for clumping distributions
Resources vary from place to place
Living in groups provides protection against predators
Living in groups gives some predators a better chance at
getting food
Mating or caring for young
Changes in Population Size: Entrances and Exits
Population size is influenced by:
Births
Deaths
Immigration
Emigration
Change in Population Births Immigration Deaths Emigration
Age structure: Young Populations Can Grow Fast
Rate of population change depends on age structure –
proportion of individuals at various ages.
Usually described by three main categories:
Pre-reproductive ages (juvenile or immature)
Reproductive ages (adult)
Post-reproductive (senescent)
Senescents
Adults
Immatures
Growing
Pop.
Stable
Pop.
Decreasing
Pop.
Limits on Population Growth: Biotic Potential vs.
Environmental Resistance
No pop. can grow indefinitely limits to growth in
nature (lesson from one of nature’s four sustainability
principles)
Pops. vary in their biotic potential – capacity for growth.
Intrinsic rate of increase (r) – rate at which a pop would grow
if it had unlimited resources.
Populations with high r:
Reproduce early in life
Have short generation times
Can reproduce many times
Have many offspring each time they reproduce
Example: House fly 5.6 x 106 descendants in 13-mo
Example: Bacteria w. generation time of 20-min 0.3-m deep
layer over the earth in 36-h
There is a size limit to growth imposed by limiting
factors.
Limiting factors: water, light, living space, nutrients,
competition, predation, and disease.
Environmental resistance – all factors that limit growth
of a pop
Negative, or corrective feedback
Biotic potential and environmental resistance lead to
carry capacity (K) – the maximum population size that a
particular habitat can sustain indefinitely w/o degrading
the habitat.
Exponential and Logistic Population Growth: J-curves
and S-curves
With ample resources a pop can grow rapidly, but as
resources become limited, its growth rate slows and
levels off.
With few, or no limitations populations grow
exponentially (exponential growth) at a fixed rate (e.g.,
2%).
N-t plot produces a J-shaped curve
Logistic growth involves rapid growth followed by a
steady decline w/ time until pop size levels off.
Decrease occurs as pop experiences environmental resistance
N-t plot produces a S-shaped (or sigmoid) curve
Figure 8-3. No population can continue to increase in size indefinitely.
Figure 8-4. Logistic growth of sheep after being introduced to the
island of Tasmania
Brown tree snake
Multiplied exponentially
Up to 5000 km-2
Venomous
Caused more than 2000
power outages
Caused the extinction of 8
out of 11 of Guam’s forests
birds.
http://www.npswapa.org/gallery/album59/Brown_tree_snake_Boiga_irregularis_U
SGS_Photograph
Figure 8-5. Brown tree snake was
accidentally introduced to Guam
during WWII.
What influence would a decline in population size of a
keystone species have on community composition?
Decrease in populations of species dependent on the keystone
species.
Increase in species that move in to occupy part or all of vacant
niches.
Exceeding Carrying
Capacity: Move, Change
Habits, or Decline in
Size
The transition from
exponential growth to
logistic growth may not
be smooth.
Occurs because of a
reproductive lag time.
Dieback, or crash ensues
(Fig. 8-6)
Figure 8-6. Exponential growth,
overshoot, and population crash after
introduction to St. Paul Island in Bearing
Sea in 1910.
Carrying capacity if an area or volume is not fixed.
Habitat may be degraded by the population that exceeded K.
Also, K varies temporally increasing or decreasing seasonally
or year to year.
Weather
Climate
Other factors
K for a population man increase by developing adaptive
traits through natural selection.
Population may migrate when K has been exceeded.
Humans are not exempt from population overshoot and
dieback.
Ireland, 1845, 1 million died, 3 million migrated
Polynesians on Eater Island, pop crashed after using up most
of island trees
Earth’s carrying capacity for humans has been extended by
technological, social, and cultural changes.
Population Density and Population Change: Effects of
Crowding
Population density – the number of individuals in a
population found in a particular area or volume.
Pop density can affect how rapidly it can grow or decline.
Some control factors are not affected by population density.
Density-dependent factors can control population size
increase as the density increases.
Competition, predation, parasitism, and diseases (e.g.,
bubonic plague in the 14th century)
Tend to regulate a pop at a fairly constant size, often near K
Density independent factors control independently of
pop density.
Mostly abiotic
Examples: freezes, floods, hurricanes, fire, pollution, and
habitat destruction
Types of Population Change Curves in Nature
Four general patterns:
Stable – size fluctuates slightly above and below K
Irruptive – explosive growth to a high peak and then crash.
Characteristic of short-lived, rapidly reproducing species
Linked to seasonal changes in weather and nutrient availability
Cyclic – regular cycles of increase and decrease
Characteristic of species in stable environments
Rise and fall of lemmings every 3-4 years
Lynx and snowshoe hare, 10-yr
(Fig 8-7)
Top-down pop regulation
Bottom-up regulation
Irregular – no pattern in change
of population size
Figure 8-7
Cases Study: Exploding White-tailed Deer Population
in the US
Since the 1930s the white-tailed deer population in the
US has exploded.
By 1900, reduced to 500 000
1920s and 30s laws passed to protect deer, and wolves and
mountain lions nearly eliminated
Today there are 25-30 million
Problem with the rebound
Encroachment
Suburbanization
Vector for Lyme disease
Solutions
Change hunting regulations
Trap and relocate
Birth control
Reproductive Patterns
Ways to reproduce: Sexual Partners Not Always
Needed
Asexual Reproduction
Produces clones
Common in taxa such as bacteria, plants and some animals
such as corals.
Sexual Reproduction
Mixes genetic material of two parents producing offspring w/
genetic traits of each parent.
Disadvantages of sexual
reproduction
First, males don’t give birth;
female has to produce twice as
many offspring to break even.
Second, increased change of
genetic errors separation and
recombination of
chromosomes.
Third, courtship and mating is
expensive (time and energy
budgets), can cause disease,
and injury may be inflicted in
males that combat for mates.
Advantages
Provides genetic diversity in
offspring
Males of some species can
help raise young
Figure 8-8. Courtship display
Reproductive Patterns: Opportunists and Competitors
Species differ in reproductive strategies to help ensure
survival.
(instead opportunists)
(good competitors)
Most species have
Figure 8-9. Positions of r-selected and Kselected species on the sigmoid population
growth curve.
reproductive patterns
between extreme r- and Kselected species.
Reproductive patterns may
give a species a temporary
advantage, but the
ultimate population
regulator is available
habitat.
Survivorship Curves
A representation of age
structure that shows the
percentage of members
surviving at different ages
(Fig. 8-11)
There are three generalized
curves: late loss, early loss,
and constant loss.
A life table shows
projected life expectancy
and probability of death
for individuals at each age
in a survivorship curve.
Figure 8-11. Survivorship curves for
populations of different species.
The problems to be faced are vast and complex, but come down to this: 6.7 billion
people are breeding exponentially. The process of fulfilling their wants and needs is
stripping earth of its biotic capacity to support life; a climactic burst of
consumption by a single species is overwhelming the skies, earth, waters, and
fauna.
-Paul Hawken
The next chapter applies the principles of population
dynamics discussed in this chapter to the growth of
human population and its environmental impact.
The principle of population dynamics are also used to
help us harvest fish and wildlife resources more
sustainably.
Figure 9-1. Crowded
street in China.