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					Populations  What is a population?  Population: a group of organisms all of the same species, which interbreed and live in the same place at the same time  Ex: Humans in Negaunee  Grey squirrels in Marquette  White-tailed deer in Ishpeming Population Growth  There are three main factors that determine how fast a population will grow  1. Birth Rate  2. Death Rate  3. Migration Rate  Immigration: movement into a population  Emigration: movement out of a population Types of growth  There are two main types of population growth  1. Exponential  2. Logistic Exponential Growth  As a population gets larger, it grows at a faster rate  Ex: The population doubles with each generation  Occurs when resources are unlimited and conditions are optimal  Results in unchecked growth  Cannot continue indefinitely Exponential Growth: “J” Shaped Curve  Starts off slow  Eventually grows faster and faster  Unchecked growth  Does NOT continue indefinitely Logistic Growth  A population cannot grow indefinitely. Eventually, certain factors will slow population growth.  Limiting factors such as food, disease, predators, and lack of space will cause population growth to slow down and stabilize. Logistic Growth: “S” Shaped Curve  Growth starts fast but limiting factors cause growth to slow and reach a stable size  Populations will slow down due to either an increased death rate or a decreased birth rate  Will reach a stable level called carrying capacity Carrying Capacity  Carrying capacity is the number of organisms of one species that an environment can support  Once the carrying capacity is reached, certain factors work to keep population in check (including lack of food, overcrowding, predations, accumulation of waste) Carrying Capacity  If a natural population overshoots the carrying capacity, three things can happen:  1. It will die back to the original carrying capacity  2. It will die back but the damage to the environment will lower carrying capacity  3. It will become extinct Limiting Factors  Factors that limit the growth and size of a population  Two types:  1. Density Dependent  2. Density Independent Bill Nye Video  1:20-3:07, 12:05 – 13:05  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XwBKV-qRIMQ Density Dependent Factors  Depend on the size of a population  Increase in effect as the population increases  Factors such as disease, competition, predation, parasitism, crowding stress  Usually not enough to eliminate a population Density Independent Factors  Affect populations regardless of density  Usually abiotic factors  Ex: pollution, habitat destruction, natural disasters, weather, temperature, chemical pesticides  Usually just brings populations below carrying capacity but these factors have the potential to cause a population to become extinct Predator Prey Relationships  Predator and prey populations follow similar patterns  If prey populations are high, the predator population will also be high  If prey populations are low, predators will have less food and their population size will decrease  f Dynamics in a Population: Age Structure  1. Very young and very old are more susceptive to disease  2. If there are huge numbers of young adults, the population will grow; if there are mostly elderly, the population will decline. Age Structure Sex Ratios  In a monogamous species, the ratio of males to females should be about equal.  Ex: Humans  In deer and lion groups, this is not as important, because one male often fertilizes many females. Behavior 1. Territory- a defended area which insured the occupants will have enough resources for themselves and their offspring. 2. Social hierarchy – wolves, chickens, social status determines which individuals eat or breed. The End!  Any questions?
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            