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Understanding Populations Section 1 Objectives • Describe the three main properties of a population. • Describe exponential population growth. • Describe how the reproductive behavior of individuals can affect the growth rate of their population. • Explain how population sizes in nature are regulated. Understanding Populations Section 1 What Is a Population? • a group of same species organisms that live in a specific area and interbreed • population came mean – the group – the size [of the population] – number of individuals Understanding Populations Section 1 Properties • Density: number of individuals of a species in a given area. • Dispersion: pattern of distribution of organisms – even, clumped, or random. Understanding Populations Section 1 How Does a Population Grow? • Growth rate represented by the equation: • Computed for a specific period of time • Changes because birth & death rates increase/ decrease. • Can be positive, negative, or zero Understanding Populations Section 1 • Zero: average births = average deaths – each pair of adults have two offspring who survived to reproduce • Negative: adults not replaced by new births, population shrinks Understanding Populations Section 1 How Fast Can a Population Grow? • In most cases barely change year to year • Factors controlling growth – Biotic potential: fastest rate of population growth – Reproductive potential: maximum number of offspring organism can produce Understanding Populations Section 1 Reproductive Potential • increases – produce more offspring at a time – reproduce more often – reproduce earlier in life • has the greatest effect on reproductive potential • Small organisms-high potentials • Large organisms-low potentials Understanding Populations Exponential Growth • logarithmic growth • populations must have plenty of food & space, no competition or predators – Ex: bacteria or molds grow on a new source of food • large number s added each succeeding time period Section 1 Understanding Populations Section 1 What Limits Population Growth? • Natural conditions limit growth – resources used up – environment changes – deaths increase or births decrease • Natural selection only allows some members to survive and reproduce – properties of a population can change over time Understanding Populations Section 1 Carrying Capacity • largest population an environment can support at any given time. • may increase beyond this number, can’t stay there • estimated by: – looking at average population sizes – observing a population crash after a certain size has been exceeded Understanding Populations Section 1 Understanding Populations Section 1 Resource Limits • Population at carrying capacity when a particular natural resource consumed at rate produced • Resource is limiting – supply of the most severely limited resources determines the carrying capacity Understanding Populations Section 1 Competition Within a Population • Members use the same resources in the same ways, so they will eventually compete as population approaches its carrying capacity • may compete for social dominance or for a territory – Indirect resource competition: space , shelter, food, or breeding sites Understanding Populations Section 1 Two Types of Population Regulation • Density dependent – deaths occur more quickly in a crowded population than in a sparse population – limited resources, predation and disease result in higher rates of death in dense populations Understanding Populations Section 1 • Density independent – a certain proportion of population dies regardless of the population’s density – affects all populations same way – typical causes: severe weather, natural disasters