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Population Ecology • Ecology: study of the interactions of organisms with each other & with the physical environment • Population: all organisms of same species that live in a particular area • Community: all of the different populations in a given area • Ecosystem: all of the different populations in a given area including living (biotic) & nonliving (abiotic) parts • Biosphere: portion of Earth’s surface where life exists Patterns of Population Growth • Each population has particular patterns of growth • Population size can stay the same, increase or decrease according to per capita rate of increase (growth rate) • Biotic potential: Highest possible per capita rate of increase for a population Patterns of Population Growth • Factors affecting biotic potential: 1. Average number of offspring per reproduction 2. Chances of survival until age of reproduction 3. Age at first reproduction 4. How often each individual reproduces • Population growth patterns can be exponential or logistic Patterns of Population Growth • Exponential patterns of population growth result in a J-shaped curve because growth rate is increasing • Logistic growth patterns result in an S-shaped curve because environmental resistance Patterns of Population Growth • Environmental resistance: all those environmental conditions that prevent populations from achieving their biotic potential – – – – Limited food supply Accumulation of waste products Increased competition Predation • Carrying capacity: number of individuals of a species that a particular environment can support Survivorship Curves • Type I curve: individuals survive past midpoint & death comes near end of maximum life span • Type II curve: survivorship decreases at a constant rate throughout life span • Type III curve: most individuals die young Human Population Growth • Growth in less developed countries is in exponential growth phase – Ex. Latin America, Africa, Asia – Population growth is expanding rapidly – Majority of people live in poverty • Growth in more developed countries has leveled off – Ex. North America, Europe – Population growth is low – Good standard of living Human Population Growth • Suggestions to reduce population growth explosion in LDC (less developed countries): 1. Establish or strengthen family planning practices (birth control) 2. Reduce desire for large families – Provide education – Raise status of women – Reduce child mortality – Improve economic stability 3. Delay onset of childbearing Age Distributions • Age-structure diagrams divide the population into three groups: 1. Preproductive 2. Reproductive 3. Postreproductive • LDC population continues to grow as long as there are more young women enter reproductive years than older women leaving them (unstable age structure). Regulation of Population Growth • Factors that regulate population growth consist of two types of life history patterns: 1. Opportunistic patterns – – – – – – Small individuals Many offspring Mature early Short life span Little or no care of offspring Ex. Insects, weeds 2. Equilibrium patterns – Large individuals – Large populations – Slow to mature – A lot of care of offspring – Long lifespan Ex. Birds, mammals Regulation of Population Growth Cont. • Density-independent factors – Abiotic factors (weather, natural disasters) – Effects population all the same – Opportunistic life history pattern • Density dependent factors – Biotic factors (competition, predation, parasitism) – Effects depend on size of population – The more dense a population, the faster a disease might spread – Equilibrium life history pattern Competition • Occurs when members of a different species try to utilize a resource that is in limited supply – Light, space, nutrients • Ecological niche: role organism plays in the community that includes its habitat & interactions with others • Habitat: where an organism lives • Competition exclusion principle: no two organisms can occupy the same niche at the same time when resources are limited • Resource partitioning reduces competition by dividing the feeding niches. Predation • Predation occurs when one organism feeds on another (prey) • Predator-prey cycling can occur if: 1. The predator population overkills the prey & forces a decline in predators. 2. The prey population has huge booms of population growth beyond their carrying capacity which results in a crash. Predator population declines due to lack of food. Antipredator Defenses • Prey have evolved strategies to escape predation • Coevolution: two species adapting in response to selective pressure imposed by each other – – – – Sharp spines of cacti Pointed leaves of holly Leathery leaves of oak tree All discourage predation by insects • Prey escape predation by utilizing camouflage, poisonous secretions, fright, flocking together, warning coloration, and mimicry. Mimicry • • 1. 2. Occurs when one species resembles another species or an object in environment to escape predation There are 2 types of mimicry: Batesian mimicry: prey that is not harmful mimics another species that is harmful. Ex. Flower fly & beetle will look like stinging wasp Mullerian mimicry: both species that look alike have good defenses Ex. Bumble bee & wasp Symbiosis • Refers to close interactions between members of two different species • Three types of symbiotic relationships are: 1. 2. 3. Parasitism: (+) (-) the parasite gets nourishment from another organism called the host. Ex. Leeches, ticks, tapeworms Commensalism: (+) (0) one species benefits, the other species is neither harmed nor helped. Ex. Barnacles on whales, clownfish/anenomes Mutualism: (+) (+) both species in the association benefit. Ex. Ants & bullhorn acacia tree, plants & animal pollinators