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Download Population Ecology - Hawk Nation Biology
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organism population community ecosystem biosphere Population Ecology Population • group of individuals of same species in same area at same time rely on same resources interact interbreed Population Ecology: What factors affect a population? Abiotic Factors: • sunlight & temperature • precipitation / water • soil / nutrients Biotic Factors: • other living organisms prey (food) competitors predators, parasites, disease Intrinsic Factors: • adaptations Describing a population: • population range • pattern of spacing density • size of population 1970 1966 1964 1960 1965 1961 Equator 1958 1951 1943 1937 1956 1970 Immigration from Africa ~1900 range density Dispersal patterns within a population: Provides insight into the environmental associations & social interactions of individuals in population 1. Clumped – grouped together in clusters 2. Random – spacing has no pattern 3. Uniform – spacing has even pattern Changes to population size • adding & removing individuals from a population birth death immigration emigration Generalized strategies 1000 Survival per thousand What do these graphs tell about survival & strategy of a species? Human (type I) Hydra (type II) I. High death rate in post-reproductive years 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) K-selected • late reproduction • few offspring • invest a lot in raising offspring primates coconut R-selected • early reproduction K-selected • many offspring • little parental care insects many plants R-selected The cost of reproduction • increase reproduction may decrease survival age at first reproduction investment per offspring number of reproductive cycles per lifetime Natural selection favors a life history that maximizes lifetime reproductive success Number & size of offspring vs. Survival of offspring or parent r-selected K-selected Characteristic of populations without limiting factors introduced to a new environment or rebounding from a catastrophe Whooping crane coming back from near extinction African elephant protected from hunting Illustrates a population with carrying capacity • Carrying Capacity – the number of organisms the environment can support over a period of time • Limiting Factors - (food, disease, predators, or lack of space) will cause population growth to slow over time As the # of prey , the # of predators As the # of predators , the # of prey As the # of predators , the # of prey Limiting factors: • Density-dependent – factors that limit growth when the population becomes too large for an area competition: food, mates, nesting sites predators, parasites, pathogens • Density-independent – factors that affect all populations no matter their size abiotic factors sunlight (energy) temperature rainfall competition for nesting sites marking territory = competition swarming locusts Any Questions? 2007-2008