Carrying capacity
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Transcript Carrying capacity
Notes 2 Carrying
Capacity
SCI 10
Ecology
Carrying Capacity
Carrying capacity: The largest
population of a species that can be
supported by an environment
Carrying Capacity
Determined by 4 factors:
1.
Matter and energy
2.
Food chains
3.
# of predators
Size of populations lower down on the chain (the amount of food
available)
Competition
4.
Sunlight, water, carbon, etc.
Intraspecific: between the members of a same species
Interspecific: between different species
Population density: the number of individuals that can live in one
place at the same time
Density-dependent factors: factors that are present during
times of overpopulation (stress, spread of illness and parasites,
etc.)
Density-independent factors: factors that are present
regardless of population size (fire, flood, earthquake, volcanic
eruption, drought, hurricane)
Healthy Ecosystems
An ecosystem where each organism has
many different food sources is more
sustainable
Greater biodiversity (variety in number of
different species) implies a healthier
ecosystem
Better able to withstand changes (loss of a
population of organisms, illness, etc.)
Graphing Carrying Capacity
Population (Y axis) vs. Year/Time (X axis)
If the line on the graph is:
Going
up: population is increasing
Going down: population is decreasing
Horizontal: population is at its carrying
capacity for that species in that ecosystem
Example
Graph Questions
During which months is the hare
population increasing?
What is the carrying capacity of hares in
Sackville?
To Do
Notes 2 Fill-in-the-blanks (use your text
and these notes)