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Population A population is a group of organisms of a single species that lives in a given area. Density and Distribution Population density = number of individuals per unit area. * Populations of different species often have very different densities, even in the same environment. Ex. A population of ducks in a pond may have a low density, while fish and other animals in the same pond community may have higher densities. Density and Distribution – Distribution = how individuals in a population are spaced out across the range of the population – randomly – uniformly – mostly concentrated in clumps Growth Rate – A population’s growth rate determines whether the population size increases, decreases, or stays the same. Age Structure – Age structure = the number of males and females of each age a population contains. Population Growth The factors that can affect population size are – Birthrate/ death rate – Immigration = move into an area – Emigration = move out of an area Calculating population change: (Births – Deaths) + (Immigration – Emigration) Exponential Growth Under ideal conditions with unlimited resources, a population will grow exponentially. In exponential growth, the larger a population gets, the faster it grows. The size of each generation of offspring will be larger than the generation before it. The Logistic Growth Curve This curve has an S-shape that represents what is called logistic growth. Logistic growth occurs when a population’s growth slows and then stops, following a period of exponential growth. . Population growth may slow for several reasons: 1. Growth may slow if the population’s birthrate decreases or the death rate increases—or if births fall and deaths rise together. 2. In addition, population growth may slow if the rate of immigration decreases, the rate of emigration increases, or both. Carrying capacity =maximum number of individuals of a particular species that a particular environment can support. Once a population reaches the carrying capacity of its environment, a variety of factors act to stabilize it at that size. • Limiting Factor = any factor that limits the existence of an organism in a particular area. May be: 1. Density-Dependent (affected by population size) 2. Density-Independent (not affected by population size) * Limiting factors are selective pressures that drive natural selection!! Include: Include: *Competition *Natural disasters *Predation *Unusual weather *Disease and Parasites *Overcrowding Predator-prey population dynamics are connected Predators kill prey affects prey death rate • prey population size depends on number of predators • with few predators, prey population grows • with many predators, prey population shrinks Predator-prey population dynamics are connected Predators kill and eat prey affects prey death rate affects predator birth rate • with few predators, prey population grows • with many prey, predator population grows • with many predators, prey population shrinks • with few prey, predator population shrinks N time Population Cycling Real world predator and prey populations can cycle in size.