Transcript Chapter 51
CHAPTER 51
Population Ecology
ECOLOGY BASICS
Terms to know…
Ecology
Branch of biology
Relatively new science
Biotic factors
Abiotic factors
Environmental science
Population
ecology + human interactions
same species, same area, same time
Population ecology
numbers + changes
FEATURES OF POPULATIONS
Properties that individuals lack:
Population density
Population dispersion
Birth/death rates
Growth rates
Survivorship rates
Age structure
Properties that communities lack:
Common gene pool
Reproductive success
Evolution
Economic importance (crops, forests, game
animals…)
POPULATION DYNAMICS
Density – the number of individuals per unit of area
or volume at a given period of time
Affected by:
Habitat
Season
Other populations
Weather
Limiting factors: the number of individuals in a population is
controlled by the ability of the environment to support it
Density-dependent factors – the effect increases as
population density increases
Examples:
Density-independent factors – affects the size of a
population but is not influenced by changes in population
density; typically abiotic
Examples:
POPULATION DYNAMICS…
Dispersion – spacing in relation to other
members of the population
Three basic varieties:
Clumped (aggregated distribution,
patchiness)
1.
Individuals are concentrated in specific areas
Reasons: distribution of resources, social behavior of
animals (herds, family groups), reproduction
Advantages: reduced chance of predation
Uniform
2.
Individuals are fairly evenly spaced
Reasons: social behavior of animals (territories), high
levels of competition between individuals
Advantages: reduced competition
3.
Random
Individual spacing is unrelated to others in the population
Does not occur often in nature
CHANGES IN POPULATION SIZE
Per capita – per individual
Natality – average per capita birth rate (b)
Mortality – average per capita death rate (d)
Immigration – individuals entering a local
population (i)
Emigration – individuals leaving a local
population (e)
Population growth rate (r):
r = (b + i) – (d + e)
If r = positive number population is increasing
If r = negative number population is decreasing
If r = zero population is staying the same
Examples:
INTRINSIC RATE OF INCREASE
Maximum rate of increase when:
Conditions are ideal
Resources are abundant
Population density is low
rmax
Factors which influence this:
Age at which reproduction begins
The fraction of the life span devoted to reproduction
The number of reproductive cycles
The number of offspring produced each cycle
Different species have different intrinsic rates…
Small organisms have high rates (bacteria); large
species have low rates (elephants)
EXPONENTIAL POPULATION GROWTH
Optimal conditions allow a constant per capita
population growth (rmax)
The larger the population gets, the faster it grows
J shape curve:
Organisms cannot reproduce this way
indefinitely because of increased:
competition, predation, disease, wastes
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
Population growth rate nears zero
Occurs near the environment’s limits to support
the population
Carrying capacity (K) – the largest population
that an area can maintain indefinitely, assuming
no changes in the environment
S shape curve: