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CorrectionKey=B SECTION 1 SECTION 1 How Populations Change in Size Objectives Focus and Motivate Describe the three main properties of a population. Describe exponential population growth. Two hundred years ago, no quagga mussels inhabited Lake Michigan, and blue whales numbered 275,000 in our oceans. Today, nearly a billion quagga mussels disrupt the ecology of Lake Michigan, and blue whale numbers are barely recovering from a low of 2,000 individuals reached under the pressure of whaling. These are opposite extremes of environmental problems expressed at the level of populations, where the balance between births and deaths can lead either to stability or major changes. What Is a Population? A population is the set of individuals within a species living in the same place at the same time. All the bass in an Iowa lake make up one population. Figure 1.1 shows other examples of a population and part of a population. The adults within a population form a reproductive group because, by definition, organisms breed with members of their own population. For example, bass in one lake will breed with each other and will not breed with bass from other lakes. Describe how the reproductive behavior of individuals can affect the growth rate of their population. Explain how population sizes in nature are regulated. Before beginning this section, review with your students the Objectives listed in the Student Edition. This section introduces the general characteristics of populations, explores how populations can grow at different rates, and explains why there are natural limits to population growth. Key Terms population density dispersion growth rate reproductive potential exponential growth carrying capacity Classroom Catalyst Have students write down the definition of a population in their science journals. (A population is all members of the same species that live in the same place at the same time and breed with each other.) Have them record examples of populations in their neighborhood. (Humans, squirrels, trees, grass, weeds, mice, cats, microbes, etc.) Ask them to draw or describe where these populations fit in an individual-to-ecosystem hierarchy. FIGURE 1.1 (r) ©Paul & Paveena Mckenzie/Oxford Scientific/Getty Images; (l) ©Sylvain Sonnet/Photographer’s Choice/Getty Images Objectives Populations All the palm trees on an island is a population, and a school of fish in a body of water is part of a population. Homework Favorite Populations Ask students to research information about populations of their favorite plant or animal. Have them answer the following questions: “Where in the world can you find populations of this organism? What kinds of resources are limiting to its growth? How are the individuals dispersed within their habitat? How do the organisms find each other to mate?” Differentiated Instruction group activity EV_CNLESE904016_C08S1.indd 197 Two Types of Growth Present the following scenario to groups of students: “You have just been offered a job that will last one month. You have two salary options. You can either receive $10 a week with a $5 per week raise every week, or you can receive one penny for your first day on the job, and then double the previous day’s pay for each of the remaining 30 days.” Ask students to determine which salary option they would prefer. Provide students with calculators to calculate their salaries. (The “double penny” option yields a Chapter 8: Understanding Populations 197 much higher salary. The weekly payment 10/30/2012 6:32:26 PM option would yield $70 for the month, while the “double penny” option would yield over $10 million.) Tell students that populations may increase in size in either of these two ways, and that this chapter will describe situations in which these two types of growth may occur. Teacher Notes In some populations, adults may spend much of the year apart and then come together for breeding. For example, elephant seals from the California population spend most of their year spread across the North Pacific foraging. An important question in environmental science is whether individuals are from the same population. For example, are all the tiger sharks in the Indian Ocean part of a population or are there separate breeding groups in different parts of the ocean (and therefore multiple populations)? Chapter 8: Understanding Populations 197 p printcode=a FIGURE 1.2 Population Density Populations may have very different sizes, densities, and dispersions. Flamingos (right) are usually found in huge, dense flocks, whereas most snakes (left) are solitary and are dispersed randomly. Teach Misconception Alert! QuickLab Skills Acquired • Collecting Data • Organizing and Analyzing Data Answers 1. Sample results: Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Starting 5 6 7 9 11 13 15 18 22 27 Births 2 2 3 4 4 5 6 8 9 11 Deaths 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 Ending 6 7 9 11 13 15 18 22 27 33 Properties of Populations QUICKLAB QUICKLAB Population Growth Procedure 1. Model the change in size of a population by applying the following equation: change in population size = births – deaths. 2. Start with 100 g (3.5 oz) of dry beans. Count out five beans to represent the starting population of a species. 3. Assume that each year 20 percent of the beans each have two offspring. Also assume that 20 percent of the beans die each year. 4. Calculate the number of beans to add or subtract for 1 year. Round your calculations to whole numbers. Add to or remove beans from your population as appropriate. 5. Continue modeling your population changes over the course of 10 years. Record each change. Analysis 1. Make a graph of your data. Describe the changes in your population. Populations may be described in terms of size, density, and dispersion, as shown in Figure 1.2. Population size is the total number of individuals, whereas density is the number of individuals per unit area or volume, such as the number of bass per cubic meter of water in a lake. A population’s dispersion describes the arrangement of its individuals in space. A population’s dispersion may be even, clumped, or random. How Does a Population Grow? A population gains individuals with each new offspring or birth and loses them with each death. The resulting population change over time can be represented by the equation below. The percentage change in the size of a population over a given period of time is that population’s growth rate. The growth rate is the birth rate minus the death rate. Over time, the growth rate of a population changes because birth rates and death rates increase or decrease. “Growth” rates can be positive, negative, or zero. For a population’s growth rate to be zero, the average number of births must equal the average number of deaths. A population would remain the same size if each pair of adults produced exactly two offspring, and each of those offspring survived to reproduce. If the adults in a population are not replaced by new births, the growth rate will be negative and the population will decrease. (tr) ©Norman Tomalin/Bruce Coleman, Inc./Photoshot; (l) ©Design Pics/Jack Goldfarb/Getty Images Populations Are Difficult to Contain The strict ecological definition of a population is tricky to apply to organisms in natural ecosystems. In the strictest sense, a population is only those members of a species that actually are interbreeding. Also, populations are in constant flux as individuals reproduce, die, or migrate in or out of a given area. Thus, the term population may commonly be used, for convenience, to refer to the number of members of a species within a defined area at a given time (whether or not they interbreed). A common example of this use is when referring to “the human population of the United States.” 198 Unit 3: Populations Differentiated Instruction GROUP ACTIVITY EV_CNLESE904016_C08S1.indd 198 Classroom Density To strengthen students’ concept of population density, ask students to mark or rope off a corner of the room that is 2 meters on each side. Have 12 students stand within the area, and ask the class to calculate the density of that population of students (12 students/4 m2 = 3 students/m2). Now ask those 12 students to double their area (4 m × 4 m = 16 m2). 198 Unit 3: Populations Ask the class to calculate the new density (12 students/16 m2 = 0.75 students/m2). Ask,3/21/2012 “Which population has the higher density and why?” (The first one, because there were more students per unit of space.) 10:27:41 AM CorrectionKey=B How Fast Can a Population Grow? A female sea turtle may lay 2,000 eggs in her lifetime. Figure 1.3 shows newly hatched sea turtles leaving their nests for the ocean. If all of them survived, the turtle population would grow rapidly. But many young turtles are eaten by crabs or fish, and others starve. All populations experience deaths, but death rates can differ among species and populations. To understand the fastest hypothetical growth rate, scientists first consider what might happen when death rates are very low. FIGURE 1.3 Reproductive Potential Most organisms have a reproductive potential that far exceeds the number of their offspring that will survive. Very few of these baby sea turtles will survive long enough to breed. Reproductive Potential A species’ biotic potential is the fastest rate at which its populations can grow. This rate is limited by the maximum number of offspring that each member of the population can produce, which is called its reproductive potential. Some species have much higher reproductive potentials than others. A bacterium can produce 19 million descendants in a few days or weeks. A pair of bowhead whales would take hundreds of years to leave that many descendants! Reproductive potential is higher when individuals produce more offspring at one time, reproduce more often, and reproduce earlier in life. Reproducing earlier in life has the greatest effect on reproductive potential. Reproducing early shortens the generation time, the average time it takes a member of the population to reach the age when it reproduces. Small organisms, such as bacteria, have short generation times. Some bacteria can reproduce when they are only twenty minutes old. As a result, their populations can grow quickly. In contrast, large organisms, such as elephants and humans, become sexually mature only after a number of years. The human generation time is about 20 years, so humans have a much lower reproductive potential than bacteria. FIGURE 1.4 Population Growth Population growth is graphed by plotting population size over a period of time. Exponential population growth will look like the curve shown here. CRITICAL THINKING Explain Under what conditions does exponential population growth take place? Exponential growth occurs in nature only when populations have plenty of food and space, and have little or no competition or predators. For example, populations of quagga mussels imported into the United States initially underwent exponential growth. Similar population explosions occur when bacteria or mold grow on a new source of food. Chapter 8: EV_CNLESE904016_C08S1.indd 199 700,000 Number of individuals ©David Hughes/Bruce Coleman, Inc./Photoshot 800,000 Populations sometimes undergo exponential growth, which means they grow faster and faster. For example, if a pair of dogs gives birth to 6 puppies, there will be 6 dogs in one generation. If each dog in that generation mates and has a litter of 6 puppies, there will be 36 dogs in the next generation. The following generation will contain 216 dogs, and so on. If the number of dogs is plotted on a graph versus time, the graph will have the shape shown in Figure 1.4. 600,000 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 0 4 8 12 16 Number of months Understanding Populations Reproductive Strategies Ask students to consider the following statement: “Animals have different strategies for maximizing reproductive success.” The sea turtles in Figure 1.3 use a lot of energy to produce many offspring at a time, but put little or no energy into offspring care. Songbirds, on the other hand, usually use a small amount of energy to produce 2–3 eggs, but then spend a great deal of energy ensuring that those few offspring survive. Ask students to give examples of how other animals maximize their reproductive success. Have students discuss how the evolution of reproductive strategies in those animals relates to their parental behaviors. (Animals that do not protect their broods gain evolutionary success by producing many offspring; animals that produce fewer offspring gain success by spending more energy per offspring.) TEACH FROM VISUALS Exponential Growth Exponential Growth Classroom Discussion 20 199 1/4/2013 2:25:33 PM Exponential Growth Use Figure 1.4 to reinforce the meaning of exponential population growth. Ask students to describe the curve and explain how it shows exponential growth. (The curve rises more and more steeply, meaning the population increases by greater amounts during each time period.) Ask, “What would the graph look like if it showed linear (or arithmetic) growth?” (It would show a straight line, increasing by the same amount during each time period.) Ask: “How does exponential growth relate to reproductive potential?” (Most organisms have the potential to reproduce “multiples” of themselves, thus creating exponential growth rates. Exponential growth is a mathematical description of nearly-unlimited population growth.) Answers Critical Thinking Exponential population growth takes place when the populations have plenty of food and space, and have little or no competition or predators. Chapter 8: Understanding Populations 199 p printcode=a What Limits Population Growth? Have students study Figure 1.5 and explain how the environment affects population growth. (As the population uses up limited resources, its numbers fluctuate and stabilize around the carrying capacity.) Then ask students to explain what caused the initial population crash. (There were more organisms than the resources could support. The population exceeded the carrying capacity.) Islands are good places to study carrying capacity because islands have clear boundaries. The Pribilof Islands off the coast of Alaska were the site of a well-studied population explosion and crash. In 1911, 25 reindeer were introduced on one of the islands. By 1938, the herd had grown to 2,000 animals. The reindeer ate mostly lichens, which grow back very slowly. By 1950, there were only 8 reindeer alive on the island. What Limits Population Growth? Because natural conditions are neither ideal nor constant, populations cannot grow forever and rarely grow at their reproductive potential. Eventually, resources are used up or the environment changes, and deaths increase or births decrease. Under the forces of natural selection in a given environment, only some members of any population will survive and reproduce. Thus, the properties of a population tend to change over time. Carrying Capacity The blue line in Figure 1.5 represents a population that seems to approach a particular size over time. This theoretical limit, the dashed yellow line, is called carrying capacity. At high densities, populations move toward lower birth rates or higher death rates (this is called density dependence). Carrying capacity is the population size where birth rates and death rates are equal. Another definition of carrying capacity for a particular species is the maximum population that its ecosystem can support indefinitely. A population may increase beyond its carrying capacity, but it cannot stay at an increased size for long. If a population is larger than the carrying capacity, it may use up its resources, and fewer individuals will survive to reproduce. Carrying capacity is difficult to predict or calculate. However, it can be estimated by looking at average population sizes or by observing a population crash after a certain size has been exceeded. Misconception Alert! Population Change Includes Migration Another possible element in the equation for population change is migration. Populations can increase by births and when individuals move into a population (immigration). Populations can decrease by deaths and when individuals move out of a population (emigration). The history of rabbits in Australia demonstrates both exponential growth and carrying capacity. Originally, there were no rabbits in the native ecosystems of Australia. When rabbits were introduced there in 1859, their numbers increased rapidly because they had plenty of vegetation to eat, no competition, and no predators. But eventually, disease and starvation caused the rabbit population to crash. Over time, the vegetation recovered, and the rabbit population increased again. FIGURE 1.5 Carrying Capacity An example of carrying capacity is shown by the dashed yellow line in the graph (right). When rabbits were introduced into Australia (below), their population quickly exceeded the carrying capacity of the area. Rabbits have eaten all the vegetation around this water hole. Population overshoots carrying capacity Population runs out of resources and declines Carrying capacity Population recovers and stabilizes Exponential growth Population crashes ©Bettmann/Corbis TEACH FROM VISUALS Carrying Capacity of Islands Population size Teach continued ECOFACT Time 200 Unit 3: Populations Differentiated Instruction teach with technology inclusion Island Carrying Capacities Have students research a specific population of organisms that was introduced to or invaded an island. (Suggest Australia, Guam, Hawaii, or Madagascar). Ask students to write an essay that focuses on population trends of that animal over time, and the way resources control those trends. Ask them to use past data to predict future population trends. On an index card, have each student draw two penny-sized circles. On a second card, the student should double the number of circles. Continue doubling the number of circles on each of the next cards until no more complete circles can fit on a card. Tell students the circles represent members of a population and the white space on the cards represent the available resources. Students should be able to discuss what problems would occur when the white space (resources) is depleted and how it would affect the population. EV_CNLESE904016_C08S1.indd 200 200 Unit 3: Populations 3/15/2012 12:04:42 PM printcode=a FIGURE 1.6 Classroom Discussion Competition Members of a population often compete with each other. These plants (below) are growing over each other as they compete for light. These wolves (right) are competing for food and for social dominance. Introduced Species Ask students, “How might an introduced species disrupt an ecosystem?” Suggest that students use Figure 1.5 and the example of rabbits in Australia as a basis for discussion. (Native species may not be adapted to compete with an introduced species, to defend against it, or to capture it as prey. If an introduced species has little competition or predation, its population can increase rapidly. These changes may ripple across the food web. The introduced population may eventually run out of resources, crash, or stabilize within the ecosystem, but the ecosystem will be fundamentally changed.) Connect to MATH Resource Limits Connect to MATH A species reaches its carrying capacity when it consumes a particular natural resource at the same rate at which the ecosystem produces the resource. That natural resource is then called a limiting resource for the species in that area. For example, plant growth is limited by supplies of water, sunlight, and mineral nutrients. The supply of the most severely limited resources determines the carrying capacity of an environment for a particular species at a particular time. Growth Rate (r) ©Charles Mauzy/Corbis; (l) ©Ronald Wittek/Photographer’s Choice/Getty Images Competition Within a Population The members of a population tend to use the same resources in the same ways, so they will eventually compete with one another as the population approaches its carrying capacity. An example is mealworm larvae in a sack of flour. Adults of this beetle will lay their eggs in a sack of flour, and leave. Most of the first larvae to hatch will have plenty of flour to eat and will grow to adulthood. However, the sack has a limited amount of food, and mealworms from eggs that were laid later may not have enough food to survive to adulthood. Instead of competing directly for a limiting resource, members of a species may compete indirectly for a resource by competing for social dominance or for a territory. A territory is an area defended by one or more individuals against other individuals. The territory is of value not only for the space but also for the shelter, food, or breeding sites it contains. Many organisms expend a large amount of time and energy competing with members of the same species. Some examples of competition within species are shown in Figure 1.6. Chapter 8: pre-ap EV_CNLESE904016_C08S1.indd 201 Understanding Equations Write the following equation on the board: ∆N = rN ∆t Explain that ∆ represents change, N is the population size at any point in time, t is time, and r is the population’s rate of growth. Ask students, “What does the equation mean in English?” (The change in population size over a period of time is equal to the rate of growth of the population.) “How does the r-value relate to the equation in this chapter?” (The rate of A growth rate is a change in a population’s size over a specific period of time. growth rate = change in population time Imagine a starting population of 100 individuals. If there were 10 births and 5 deaths in a given year, what was the population’s growth rate for the year? In the next year, if there were 20 births and 10 deaths, what would the new growth rate be? If births increased by 10 and deaths increased by 5 for each of the next 5 years, how would you describe the growth of this population? Answers Check for Understanding Sample answer: Plants grow over each other as they compete for light. Connect to Math With an original population size of 100, and 10 births and 5 deaths, the change in population would be +5, so the population would increase to 105. The next year, with 20 births and 10 deaths, the change in population would be +10, and the new population size would be 115. In each of the next five years, the rate of population increase would accelerate. Calculations: Year CHECK FOR UNDERSTANDING Describe Describe one example of competition among members of a population. Understanding Populations 201 growth, r, is the difference between births and 3/15/2012 12:04:53 deaths over time.) “What does this equation tellPM us about populations with high r- values?” (They are increasing rapidly.) “What is missing in this equation?” (It ignores environmental limits and migration.) Note: For r, biologists often use the per-capita growth rate (average growth rate per individual), instead of the absolute growth rate given in the Connect to Math example. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Starting 100 105 115 130 150 175 pop. Births 10 20 30 40 50 60 Deaths 5 10 15 20 25 Ending pop. 30 105 115 130 150 175 205 Growth +5 +10 +15 +20 +25 +30 rate % change 5.0 9.5 13.0 15.4 16.7 17.1 Chapter 8: Understanding Populations 201 printcode=a Quiz 1. In what ways are disease and predation density-dependent? (In a dense population, increased physical contact and waste products mean that disease could spread more easily. Dense prey populations make it easier for predators to find prey.) 2.What are some examples of resources that could determine carrying capacity in an ecosystem? (water, sunlight, amount of soil, or any item that regenerates at a fixed rate and is consumed by all members of a species) Density-Dependent Change The way a disease spreads through a population is affected by the population’s density. These pine trees have been infected by a disease carried by the southern pine beetle. This disease has spread rapidly through timber forests in the United States. FIGURE 1.8 Density-Independent Change Weather events usually affect every individual in a similar way, so such events are considered density-independent regulation. Alternative Assessment Carrying Capacity and Energy Flow Ask students to think about energy flow in ecosystems. Have them draw an energy pyramid for grass, gazelles and lions. (Grass forms a large base level, with gazelles in the middle, and lions as a small top level.) Ask students, “How does the loss of energy at each trophic level affect the carrying capacity of these populations?” (The carrying capacity is lower at the top of the pyramid. A lion population needs a larger number of gazelle prey, which need to feed on a very large amount of grass.) Rates of birth or death in a population may be density dependent or density independent. Density-dependent deaths occur more quickly in a crowded population than in a sparse population. Limited resources, predation, and disease often result in higher rates of death in dense populations than in sparse populations. The pine trees in Figure 1.7 are infected with a disease that is spreading in a density-dependent pattern. Many of the same kind of pine tree are growing close to each other, so a diseasecarrying beetle easily spreads the disease from one tree to another. When a cause of death is density independent, a certain proportion of a population dies regardless of the population’s density. This type of regulation affects all members of a population in a general or uniform way. Severe weather and natural disasters are often density-independent causes of death. The winter storm shown in Figure 1.8 froze crops and fruiting trees regardless of the density of plants in the area. Populations can show alternating periods of exponential growth and population crashes with density-independent death rates. Many species of animals in unpredictable environments show this pattern of population change. Carrying Capacity Comics Have students design a comic strip to show what might happen when a species exceeds its carrying capacity. Reteach Patterns of Population Change Section 1 Formative Assessment Reviewing Main Ideas 1. Compare two populations in terms of size, density, and dispersion. Choose any populations you know of. 2. Describe exponential population growth. 3. Describe three methods by which the reproductive behavior of individuals can affect the growth rate of a population. 4. Explain how population sizes in nature are regulated. Critical Thinking 5. Making Predictions How accurately do you think the future size of a population can be predicted? What information might be needed to make a prediction? 6. Compare and Contrast Read the description of the populations of rabbits in Australia and reindeer in the Pribilof Islands. List the similarities and differences between these two histories. 202 Unit 3: Populations Answers to Formative Assessment 1. Answers may vary. Students should mention size, density, and dispersion. 2. Exponential growth will increase by a multiplicative factor (may double or triple with each generation), while linear growth merely adds the same number to each generation. 3. Populations can have increased growth rates if individuals reproduce earlier in life, reproduce more often, or produce more offspring at a time. 4. Interactions with the environment will change the characteristics of a population over time. The population may change in size, density, dispersion, or niche. EV_CNLESE904016_C08S1.indd 202 202 Unit 3: Populations (cl) ©Wendell Metzen/Bruce Coleman, Inc./Photoshot; (t) ©Science Photo Library/Alamy Assess and Reteach FIGURE 1.7 5. Answers may vary. To predict future population size, one would need to know all the 3/15/2012 environmental factors that might act on the population, including predators, prey, abiotic factors, climate, etc. One might only be able to accurately predict population size if all of these factors were stable. 6. Answers may vary. Students should describe how each population exceeded its resources, then crashed. 12:05:00 PM