Download Population Dynamics

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Population Dynamics
Ecology
Chapter 4.1
Principles of Population Growth


A population is a group of organisms of the
same species that live in a specific area.
Healthy populations will grow and die at a
relatively steady rate unless resources run out
or disease.
Population Growth


Populations grow on a J-curve or exponential
curve.
Rates start slow and then rapidly increase.
Limits on Growth



Can populations grow forever? NO.
Populations reach limiting factors like food,
disease, predators, lack of space.
This is depicted in a graph of population #’s as
a S-curve.
Carrying Capacity


The number of organisms of one species that an
environment can support indefinitely is its
carrying capacity.
What is human’s carrying capacity?
Reproduction Patterns



In nature, animals and plant populations
change in size- even at different times of the
year.
Reproductive patterns are known as lifehistory patterns.
There are two patterns- slow (humans) and
rapid (mosquitoes).
Slow and Fast life-history


Rapid- usually small organisms in unpredictable
environments that rapidly mature and have a
short life.
Slow- live in stable environments and have a
long life span and mature slowly. They usually
live around the carrying capacity.
Density factors



Density-dependent factors- factors that have an
increasing effect on a large, growing
population. Diseases, predators, food,
parasites.
Density-independent factors- factors that affect
populations regardless of size or density.
Abiotic factors like fires, floods, drought…
Populations are either randomly spread,
clumped, or uniform.
Dependent or Independent?
Dependent or Independent?
Uniform/Random/Clumped
Predation and Population Size

Populations of predators and their prey
experience cycles or changes in their numbers
over periods of time.
Crowding and Stress


When populations are crowded, organisms
exhibit symptoms of stress.
Populations exhibit aggression, decrease in
parental care and decreased resistance to
disease.
Related documents