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POPULATION ECOLOGY Population Density • is a measurement of population per unit area Population Total land area What is this population density per these unit areas? 10 m 1nm What affects population growth? • 1. Number of births. • 2. Number of deaths. • 3. Number of individuals that enter or leave the population. Exponential Growth J curve • Exponential Growth animation Conditions for Exponential Growth • 1. plenty of food • 2. plenty of space • 3. protected from predators and disease Exponential Growth Videos Bacteria Growth Video • TeacherTube Videos - Bacterial Growth • **BBC - Learning Zone Class Clips Bacterial growth – Biology • Bacterial Culture • (click on animation of bacterial culture) • Bacterial Culture • If the environment is optimum, the two daughter cells may divide into four in 20 minutes. Oh my! 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64... Then why isn't the earth covered with bacteria? Logistic Growth S curve Logistic Growth (ani) • At first the population increases, then resources become limited…growth at a slower rate. Carrying Capacity • Largest number of individuals that an environment can support. Rabbits Over Time INTERPRETING ECOLOGICAL DATA • Graph 1: Rabbits Over Time a. The graph shows an S (logistic) Shaped growth curve. b. b. The carrying capacity for rabbits is ~65 c. During which month were the rabbits in exponential growth?June Average Toe Length INTERPRETING ECOLOGICAL DATA • a. In 1800, about how many people surveyed had a 3 cm toe? ~58 • How many in 2000? ~10 b. The data shows the *Stabilizing selection has occurred? c. In 2000, what is the average toe length? ~4.5 • What is the average toe length in 1800? about the same, broader range • #see next slide •Graph 2: Average Toe Length Mode of Natural Selection INTERPRETING ECOLOGICAL DATA • Graph 3: Mexico and US • a. In Mexico, what percentage of the population is between 0-4 years of age? 16 In the US? 7 • b. Which population is growing the fastest? Mexico • c. Which age group has the smallest number in both countries? 80+ Tagging Geese INTERPRETING ECOLOGICAL DATA • Chart 4: Trapping Geese • ecologists marked 10 geese • a. Use the formula to calculate the estimated number of geese in the area studied? 60(10) / 6 = 100 b. This technique is called Mark & Recapture c. Supposing more of the geese found in the trap had the mark, would the estimated number of geese in the area be greater or lesser? less (bottom number would be greater in formula) Trapping Geese recaptured YEAR GEESE TRAPPED # WITH MARK 1980 10 1 1981 15 1 1982 12 1 1983 8 0 1984 5 2 1985 10 1 Mushroom Plots INTERPRETING ECOLOGICAL DATA • Chart 5: Mushroom Plots • She plots a 10 x 10 area and randomly chooses 5 spots, • a.Calculate the number of mushrooms in the forest based on the grid data: Average per grid = 3, 100 plots; total = 300 • b. This technique is called Random Sampling Snake and Mice Populations The maximum number of individuals a habitat can support is called the Carrying Capacity. Population Growth = Mice Born – Mice Death INTERPRETING ECOLOGICAL DATA • Chart 6: Snakes & Mice (see next slide) • a. During which year was the mouse population at zero population growth? 2000, closest to zero • b. What is the carrying capacity for snakes ? 15 c. What is the carrying capacity for mice? 600-620 • d. What is the rate of growth for mice during 1970? +500 During 1980? -100 YEAR SNAKES MICE DIED 2 MICE BORN 1000 1960 1970 10 800 300 1980 30 400 500 1990 15 600 550 2000 14 620 600 2001 15 640 580 200 Limiting Factors • Density Dependent large, dense populations are more strongly affected than small, less crowded ones. • EXAMPLES: Food Predators Water Disease Living space • Density Independent • Factors that can affect a population no matter what size it is • EXAMPLES: Hurricane • Forest fire • Clear cutting • Building dam Density-Dependent Limiting Factors • • • • • Competition Predation Parasitism Disease Living Space Limited Food Predation DD or DI? fire predator • DI • DD • DD Density of plants DD or DI? cannibalism Cutting trees disease • DD • DI • DD LIMITING FACTORS WORKSHEET: Read Yellow Perch in Lake Winnipeg HUMAN POPULATION GROWTH • http://www.gov.mb.ca/conservation/sustain /limfac.pdf • The world population is the population of humans on the planet Earth. It is currently estimated to be 6,874,700,000 by the US Census Bureau. Human Population • How will the world population change in the future? • Is the population distributed evenly around the earth? Human Population • Energy 365 Technology Basics: Population Growth : Video : Discovery Channel • Visuals: NOAA's nighttime lights of the world data set China’s One-Child Policy • It officially restricts the number of children married urban couples can have to one, although it allows exemptions for several cases, including rural couples, ethnic minorities, and parents without any siblings themselves.[ 计划生育政策 Indoor Air Pollution of Poorer Countries Access to safe water and sanitation are two of the most fundamental indicators of public health. Widespread HIV infection in subSaharan Africa is changing the region's demographic structure and impinging on its economic performance. Before the 19th century, world population grew very slowly because high fertility was offset by high mortality. Improvements in population health, triggered partly by the industrial revolution, ushered in a period of rapid population growth. Disease Can Even Jump Species The Plague Caterpillar Eating Maple Leaves Lynx vs. Hare Predator Prey Model • Predator Prey • Can change numbers of rabbits and foxes over years Clumped Uniform Random Pattern of Distribution: RANDOM Pattern of Districution: CLUMPED Pattern of Distribution: UNIFORM “Mark and Recapture” • Method used to estimate population size • Total no. captured X no. marked (total number recaptured with mark) Capture-Mark-Recapture Random Sampling • Each member of the population has an equal and known chance of being selected. • http://www.cee.vt.edu/ewr/environmental/teach/smprimer/design/randanim.gif Resources Can be replaced or be regenerated Cannot be replenished RENEWABLE RESOURCE • A natural resource is a renewable resource if it is replaced by natural processes at a rate comparable or faster than its rate of consumption by humans. • Geothermal timber • Water leather • Wind solar Geothermal Plant in Iceland NONRENEWABLE RESOURCE • Cannot be produced, grown, or generated at a rate as fast as it is used. • Gasoline coal natural gas “Sustainable Development” • Using natural resources without depleting them Replant trees • Fighting poverty Biomass energy Harming our Resources • Desertification- =productive land turned into desert by over farming, overgrazing Harming our Resources • Deforestation-loss of forests Acid Rain has a pH of about 5.5. • sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) are the primary causes of acid rain. Sources of Acid Rain? pH ranges SMOG • Smoke + fog = smog L.A. BIODIVERSITY Why is Biodiversity Necessary? •The more bio-diverse an ecosystem is, the more likely it is to survive. Why is Biodiversity Necessary? • For example, in a corn field with one type of corn (not bio-diverse), if a disease wiped out that corn, all organisms living there would die. Why is Biodiversity Necessary? • In an ocean (very bio-diverse), if one type of plant died, another kind could fill its niche. Species of Many Kinds Provide us medicines, industrial products, and foods Drugs from Nature Biological Magnification Concentrations of harmful substances increase at higher trophic levels DDT • dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane is one of the most well-known synthetic pesticides. delousing Used 19481972 Mosquito fogger Criticisms of DDT -Decline in bird populations (thin egg shells) -Increases in cancer -Slow growth of algae -Retained in earthworms and plankton – passed through biological magnification -Reproductive toxicity -Poisoning -Does not get through human skin, but will collect in fat if ingested Banned 1972 Because • 1. Caused cancer in Humans • 2. Deleterious effect on freshwater fish, estuary organisms, wild birds, and other wildlife. Rachel Carson spoke against DDT Invasive Species • Non-native plants or animals invading an area Invasive Species • Zebra Mussels were carried in on ships from Russia and became abundant in the Great Lakes. Invasive Species • Purple loosestrife invades marshes and lakeshores, replacing cattails and other wetland plants. • Kudzu – from Japan to stop erosion KSU’s Black Squirrels • In February 1961, Larry Wooddell, the superintendent of KSU's™ 500 acres, and Biff Staples, a Davey Tree expert, ventured to Ontario, Canada to obtain 10 cages with black squirrels. Both men worked with the Canadian Wildlife Service and American and Canadian Customs for permission to move the squirrels. Black Squirrels • By 1964, the Kent Record-Courier observed that there were up to 150 squirrels in the area. Ozone Depletion • Ozone (O3) • Protects the earth from UV Banned CFC’s • Chlorofluorocarbons in aerosols Break off an o from O3 ANIMATIONS • CFC and Ozone animation • CFCs attacking O3 Global Warming • Increase in the average temperature of the Earth’s nearsurface air and oceans • Coastlines rise Evidence of Global Warming Sea Ice Melts. Evidence of Global Warming • NASA's Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment show Greenland lost 150 to 250 cubic kilometers (36 to 60 cubic miles) of ice per year between 2002 and 2006, while Antarctica lost about 152 cubic kilometers (36 cubic miles) of ice between 2002 and 2005. Evidence of Global Warming • The carbon dioxide content of the Earth’s oceans has been increasing since 1750, and is currently increasing about 2 billion tons per year. This has increased ocean acidity by about 30 percent Evidence of Global Warming • Global temperatures have risen Evidence of Global Warming Evidence of Global Warming: Glacial Retreat Evidence of Global Warming: More Frequent Hurricanes Frequency of Hurricanes. Evidence of Global Warming: Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Concentration. : • Global sea level rose about 17 centimeters (6.7 inches) in the last century. The rate in the last decade, however, is nearly double that of the last century. Evidence of Global Warming • The oceans have absorbed much of this increased heat, with the top 700 meters (about 2,300 feet) of ocean showing warming of 0.302 degrees Fahrenheit since 1969.