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Ecology Population Ecology Populations 3. A population is a group of individuals of the same species living in an area 2 Distribution Patterns Populations disperse in a variety of ways that are influenced by environmental and social factors • Uniform distribution results from intense competition or antagonism between individuals. • Random distribution occurs when there is no competition, antagonism, or tendency to aggregate. • Clumping is the most common distribution because environmental conditions are seldom uniform. 3 What causes these populations of different organisms to clump together? Clumped distribution in species acts as a mechanism against predation as well as an efficient mechanism to trap or corner prey. It has been shown that larger packs of animals tend to have a greater number of successful kills. Fig. 52.1, Campbell & Reece, 6th ed. Population Dispersal • In rare cases, longdistance dispersal can lead to adaptive radiation – For example, Hawaiian silverswords are a diverse group descended from an ancestral North American tarweed 5 The Spread of the Africanized Honey Bee When did they first arrive in the Americas? How long did it take for them to expand their range into the US? How can you explain their success in expanding their territory? 6 Estimating Population Size The Mark-and-Recapture Technique 2. 1. 3. 7 Estimating Population Size The Mark-and-Recapture Technique • There’s a simple formula for estimating the total population size 𝑠 𝑥 = 𝑁 𝑛 s = Number of individuals marked and released in 1st sample x = Number of individuals marked and released in 2nd sample n = Total number of individuals in 2nd sample N = Estimated population size Rearrange to get: 𝑁= 𝑠𝑛 𝑥 8 Let’s Try an Example! • Twenty individuals are captured at random and marked with a dye or tag and then are released back into the environment. • Therefore s = # of animals marked = 20 • At a later time a second group of animals is captured at random from the population 9 Let’s Try an Example! • Some will already be marked, say 10 individuals were marked out of 35 that were captured the second time. We now know n = 35 and x = 10 • So, apply the formula and solve for the estimated population size: 𝑁= 𝑠𝑛 𝑥 = 20 35 10 = 700 = 70 10 Therefore, N = 70 as a population estimate 10 Which method would you use? 1. To determine the number of deer in the state of Virginia? 2. To determine the number of turkeys in a county? 3. To determine the number of dogs in your neighborhood? 4. To determine the number of ferrel cats in your neighborhood? 11 Survivorship curves 1000 What do these graphs indicate regarding species survival rate & strategy? Human (type I) I. High death rate in post-reproductive years Hydra (type II) Survival per thousand 100 II. Constant mortality rate throughout life span Oyster (type III) 10 1 0 25 50 75 Percent of maximum life span 100 III. Very high early mortality but the few survivors then live long (stay reproductive) Number of survivors (log scale) Ideal Survivorship Curves I 1,000 100 II 10 III 1 0 50 Percentage of maximum life span 100 Population Growth Curves 𝑑𝑁 =𝐵−𝐷 𝑑𝑡 d = delta or change N = population Size t = time B = birth rate D =death rate 14 Population Growth Models Exponential model (blue) idealized population in an unlimited environment (J-curve); can’t continue indefinitely. r-selected species (r = per capita growth rate) 𝑑𝑁 = 𝑟𝑚𝑎𝑥 𝑁 𝑑𝑡 Logistic model (red) considers population density on growth (S-curve), carrying capacity (K): maximum population size that a particular environment can support; K-selected species 𝑑𝑁 𝐾−𝑁 = 𝑟𝑚𝑎𝑥 𝑁 𝑑𝑡 𝐾 Exponential Growth Curves Growth Rate of E. coli d = delta or change N = Population Size t = time rmax = maximum per capita growth rate of population Population Size, N 𝒅𝑵 = 𝒓𝒎𝒂𝒙 𝑵 𝒅𝒕 Time (hours) 16 Logistic Growth Curves • In the logistic population growth model, the per capita rate of increase (rmax) declines as carrying capacity (K) is reached • The logistic model starts with the exponential model and adds an expression that reduces per capita rate of increase as N approaches K 𝑑𝑁 𝐾−𝑁 = 𝑟𝑚𝑎𝑥 𝑁 𝑑𝑡 𝐾 17 Logistic Growth Curves 𝑑𝑁 𝐾−𝑁 = 𝑟𝑚𝑎𝑥 𝑁 𝑑𝑡 𝐾 d = delta or change N = Population Size t = time K =carrying capacity rmax = maximum per capita growth rate of population 18 Comparison of Growth Curves 19 Growth Curve Relationship 20 Examining Logistic Population Growth Graph the data given as it relates to a logistic curve. Title, label and scale your graph properly. 21 Examining Logistic Population Growth Hypothetical Example of Logistic Growth Curve K = 1,000 & rmax = 0.05 per Individual per Year 22 Population Reproductive Strategies • r-selected (opportunistic) • Short maturation & lifespan • Many (small) offspring; usually 1 (early) reproduction; • No parental care • High death rate • K-selected (equilibrial) • Long maturation & lifespan • Few (large) offspring; usually several (late) reproductions • Extensive parental care • Low death rate How Well Do These Organisms Fit the Logistic Growth Model? Some populations overshoot K before settling down to a relatively stable density Some populations fluctuate greatly and make it difficult to define K 24 Age Structure Diagrams: Always Examine The Base Before Making Predictions About The Future Of The Population Rapid growth Afghanistan Male Female 10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 Percent of population Age 85+ 80–84 75–79 70–74 65–69 60–64 55–59 50–54 45–49 40–44 35–39 30–34 25–29 20–24 15–19 10–14 5–9 0–4 8 10 8 Slow growth United States Male Female 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 Percent of population Age 85+ 80–84 75–79 70–74 65–69 60–64 55–59 50–54 45–49 40–44 35–39 30–34 25–29 20–24 15–19 10–14 5–9 0–4 8 8 No growth Italy Male Female 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 Percent of population Natural Selection • This includes describing how organisms respond to the environment and how organisms are distributed. – Events that occur in the framework of ecological time (minutes, months, years) translate into effects over the longer scale of evolutionary time (decades, centuries, millennia, and longer). 26 Natural Selection 27 Natural Processes 28 Finch Beak Size or Shape 29 Modes of Selection http://gregladen.com/blog/2007/01/the-modes-of-natural-selection/ 30 Modes of Selection Disruptive- produces a bimodal curve as the extreme traits are favored Stabilizing-reduces variance over time as the traits move closer to the mean Directional-favors a phenotypic trait (selected by the environment) Scenario These photographs show the same location on Captiva Island following Hurricane Charley. What would happen to a population of birds who derive their diets from the tree tops? The population had a wide range of beak sizes. What would happen to the population gene pool over time if the new environment favored smaller beaks? Over time, which beak would be most represented in the population of birds? 32 Selection Diagrams A B C 33 Beak Selection After Hurricane 34 Hydrangea Flower Color Hydrangea react to the environment and ultimately display their phenotype based on the pH of their soil. Hydrangea flower color is affected by light and soil pH. Soil pH exerts the main influence on which color a hydrangea plant will display. 35 Biogeographic Realms 36 Introduced Species • What’s the big deal? • These species are free from predators, parasites and pathogens that limit their populations in their native habitats. • These transplanted species disrupt their new community by preying on native organisms or outcompeting them for resources. 37 Guam: Brown Tree Snake • The brown tree snake was accidentally introduced to Guam as a stowaway in military cargo from other parts of the South Pacific after World War II. • Since then, 12 species of birds and 6 species of lizards the snakes ate have become extinct. • Guam had no native snakes. Dispersal of Brown Tree Snake 38 Southern U.S.: Kudzu Vine • The Asian plant Kudzu was introduced by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture with good intentions. • It was introduced from Japanese pavilion in the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. • It was to help control erosion but has taken over large areas of the landscape in the Southern U.S. 39 New York: European Starling • From the New York Times, 1990 The year was 1890 when an eccentric drug manufacturer named Eugene Schieffelin entered New York City's Central Park and released some 60 European starlings he had imported from England. In 1891 he loosed 40 more. Schieffelin's motives were as romantic as they were ill fated: he hoped to introduce into North America every bird mentioned by Shakespeare. Skylarks and song thrushes failed to thrive, but the enormity of his success with starlings continues to haunt us. This centennial year is worth observing as an object lesson in how even noble intentions can lead to disaster when humanity meddles with nature. 40 New York: European Starling • From the New York Times, 1990 (cont.) Today the starling is ubiquitous, with its purple and green iridescent plumage and its rasping, insistent call. It has distinguished itself as one of the costliest and most noxious birds on our continent. Roosting in hordes of up to a million, starlings can devour vast stores of seed and fruit, offsetting whatever benefit they confer by eating insects. In a single day, a cloud of omnivorous starlings can gobble up 20 tons of potatoes. 41 Zebra Mussels • The native distribution of the species is in the Black Sea and Caspian Sea in Eurasia. • Zebra mussels have become an invasive species in North America, Great Britain, Ireland, Italy, Spain, and Sweden. • They disrupt the ecosystems by monotypic (one type) colonization, and damage harbors and waterways, ships and boats, and water treatment and power plants. 42 Zebra Mussels • Water treatment plants are most impacted because the water intakes bring the microscopic free-swimming larvae directly into the facilities. • The Zebra Mussels also cling on to pipes under the water and clog them. • This shopping cart was left in zebra mussel-infested waters for a few months. The mussels have colonized every available surface on the cart. (J. Lubner, Wisconsin Sea Grant, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.) 43 Zebra Mussel Range 44 INQUIRY: Does feeding by sea urchins limit seaweed distribution? • W. J. Fletcher of the University of Sydney, Australia reasoned that if sea urchins are a limiting biotic factor in a particular ecosystem, then more seaweeds should invade an area from which sea urchins have been removed. 46 INQUIRY: Does feeding by sea urchins limit seaweed distribution? • Seems reasonable and a tad obvious, but the area is also occupied by seaweed-eating mollusc called limpets. • What to do? Formulate an experimental design aimed at answering the inquiry question. 47 Predator Removal 48 Predator Removal Removing both limpets and urchins or removing only urchins increased seaweed cover dramatically 49 Predator Removal Almost no seaweed grew in areas where both urchins and limpets were present (red line) , OR where only limpets were removed (blue line) 50 Created by: Susan Ramsey Virginia Advanced Study Strategies Notable contributions by S.Meister