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4/13/2011 Population – group of interbreeding individuals occupying the same habitat at the same time Water lilies in a particular lake in New York City Humans Section 4 S i Population ecology – study of what factors affect population size and how these factors change over space and time Uses the tools of demography – birth rates, death rates, age distributions, and sizes of populations Professor Donald McFarlane Lecture 18 Ecology: Population Growth 2 Understanding populations Quantifying population density Simple visual count methods to extrapolate captured organism number to size of population Mark-recapture method Sampling Density – number of organisms in a given unit area Population growth affects population density Knowledge can help us make decisions about the management of species 3 4 1 4/13/2011 Dispersion patterns Clumped Most common Resources tend to be clustered in nature Social behavior may promote this pattern Uniform Competition may cause this pattern May also result from social interactions Random Rarest Resources are rarely randomly spaced May occur where resources are common and abundant 5 6 7 8 Reproductive strategies Semelparity – produce all offspring in single reproductive event, individuals reproduce once and d di die Iteroparity – reproduce in successive years or breeding seasons Seasonal iteroparity – distinct breeding seasons Continuous iteroparity – reproduce repeatedly at any time of the year 2 4/13/2011 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 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Age classes strategy has a strong effect on subsequent age classes of a population Semelparous organisms with same-aged young called cohorts Iteroparous organisms have young of different ages Expect a population increasing in size to have many young and a decreasing population to have few young 9 Percent of trees Reproductive 60 40 20 10 20 30 (a) Undisturbed forest 40 50 60 10 20 Age of trees (years) 30 40 50 60 70 (b) Overgrazed forest 10 Life tables Data on the number of individuals alive in a p particular age g class Males are usually not included North American beaver example Trappers provided mandibles Teeth extracted for age classification 11 12 3 4/13/2011 Survivorship curve – plots numbers of surviving individuals at each age Use log scale to make it easier to examine wide range of population sizes Beavers have a fairly uniform rate of death over the life span 13 14 3 patterns of survivorship curves Type I – rate of loss of juveniles low and most individuals lost later in life Type II – fairly uniform death rate Beaver example Type III – rate of loss for juveniles high and then loss low for survivors 15 16 4 4/13/2011 Age-specific fertility rate, mx Proportion of female offspring born to females of reproductive age 100 females p produce 75 female offspring p g mx=0.75 R0 = net reproductive rate Overall growth rate per generation Number of offspring born to females of all ages Age-specific survivorship rate, lx Use survivorship data to find proportion of individuals alive at the start of any given age class lxmx = contribution of each age class to overall population growth 17 18 How populations grow To calculate future size of population, multiply number of individuals in the population p p by y the net reproductive p rate For beaver example, Nt+1 = NtR0 Exponential growth – resources not limiting, prodigious growth Logistic growth – resources limiting, limits to growth = 1,000 x 1.1 = 1,100 If R0>1, population growing If R0<1, population declining If R0 = 1, population is at equilibrium Life tables can provide accurate information about how populations grow from generation to generation Simpler models can give insight to shorter time periods 19 20 5 4/13/2011 When r>0, population increase is rapid J-shaped curve Intrinsic rate of increase increase, rmax = r at maximum Because population growth depends on the value of N as well as the value of r, the population increase is even greater as time passes Reintroduction of a population to a habitat, growth of introduced exotic species, and global human population in population size over any time Characteristic period p births and deaths expressed per individual 100 births to 1000 deer = 0.10 50 deaths in 1000 deer = 0.50 Often 21 22 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 400 600 Predicted abundance Actual abundance 500 Num mber of animals Change Exponential growth Per capita growth rate Popu ulation size 400 300 200 100 200 100 0 0 1970 1980 1990 Year (a) Tule elk 23 2000 Survey year (b) Black-footed ferrets 24 6 4/13/2011 Logistic growth Logistic growth – pattern where growth slows down as it approaches K Model fits some populations but not others For most species, resources become limiting as p populations p g grow Carrying capacity (K) or upper boundary for population Logistic equation Variations in nature change resource levels that cause changes in carrying capacity 25 26 27 28 7 4/13/2011 Density-dependent factors Mortality factor whose influence varies with the density of the population Parasitism, predation, and competition Predators kill few prey when the prey population is l low, th they kill more prey when h th the population l ti iis hi higher h Detected by plotting mortality against population density and finding positive slope Density-independent factor Mortality factor whose influence is not affected by changes in population size or density Generally physical factors – weather, drought, flood, fire 29 30 Life history strategies Continuum r-selected species – high rate of per capita population growth, r, but poor competitive ability (weeds) K-selected species – more or less stable populations adapted to exist at or near carrying capacity, K Lower reproductive rate but better competitors (trees) 31 32 8 4/13/2011 Human population growth In 2006, the world’s population was estimated to be increasing at the rate of 146 people every minute 2 in developed nations and 144 in less developed nations Human growth fits an exponential pattern Low until agriculture and animal domestication Between 1750 and 1998, population surged from 800 million to 6 billion 33 34 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 8 Popula ation (billions) 7 6 2000 5 4 3 2 1 1975 1. Human populations can exist at equilibrium densities in one of two ways High birth and high death rates 1950 1900 1800 2. B f Before 1750, 1750 thi this was often ft th the case, with ith high hi h bi birth th rates offset by deaths from wars, famines, and epidemics Low birth and low death rates 0 35 In Europe, beginning in the 18th century, better health and living conditions reduced the death rate Eventually, social changes such as increasing education for women and marriage at a later age reduced the birth rate 36 9 4/13/2011 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Relative population size High birth rate High death rate Birth rate decreases Death rate decreases Death rate Low r Birth rate Low birth rate Low death rate Relative po opulation size Demographic transition Shift in birth and death rates with development First stage - birth and death rates are both high, and the population remains in equilibrium Second stage - death rate declines first first, while the birth rate remains high - high rates of population growth result Third stage - birth rates drop and death rates stabilize, so that population growth slows Fourth stage - both birth and death rates are low, and the population is again at equilibrium Birth and death rates Relative population size Increasing Maximal Decreasing r Low 37 38 Age structure Relative numbers of individuals in each defined age g g group p Commonly displayed as population pyramid Helps predict future population growth Exact pace varies between countries depending on culture, economics, politics, and religion 39 40 10 4/13/2011 Earth’s carrying capacity Many and varied estimates has a huge influence Total fertility rate – average number of live births a woman has during her lifetime Lifestyle Global TFR declined from 4.47 in 1970s to 2.59 in 2007 2.3 needed for zero population growth Differs considerably between geographic areas In developed nations, population has stabilized In developing countries, population is still increasing dramatically 41 42 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 6.7 4.7 North America 5.0 Europe 5.0 2.3 24 2.4 A i Asia Africa Latin America & Caribbean 1970–1975 1.5 3.2 2.3 Populatio on (billions) 2.2 2.0 2.0 11 10 TFR of 2.5 (high) TFR of 2.0 (medium) TFR of 1.5 (low) 10.8 9.2 9 8 7.8 7 Oceania 6 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 2050 Year 2005 43 44 11 4/13/2011 Ecological footprint Aggregate total of productive land needed for survival in a sustainable world Average footprint size is about 3 hectares (1ha=10,000 m2) Wide variation is found around the globe 7.5 for Canadians, 10 for Americans 45 46 12