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Population Ecology SNC1L Science Populations Change • A Population is all of the members of a single species living in an area. • The various populations of different species in one area are called a community. • Population size depends on four factors: Births, Deaths, Immigration, and Emigration. (migrating in) (migrating out) P = (N+I) – (M+E) 5/22/2017 2 Populations are limited • A limiting factor is any biotic or abiotic factor that affects growth of a population. Too much or too little of any one is not good! • Populations will grow or decline depending on their Biotic Potential • This depends on: • Birth Potential BIOTIC ABIOTIC • Capacity for Survival Food resources Level of light • Procreation Predation Temperature Disease Chemicals • Reproductive Lifespan Competition 5/22/2017 Water Resources 3 Birth Potential • Maximum Number of offspring per birth • Humans have a much lower birth potential than ducks, or salmon. • Whooping Cranes only lay two eggs a year. 5/22/2017 4 Capacity for Survival • Number of offspring that survive to reproductive age • Humans have a better chance at this than many other species... • Female Clams release five million eggs at a time, but only 50 may survive. • Sea Turtles lay 50 – 100 eggs, but few reach maturity. • Parenting is not universal in nature! 5/22/2017 5 Procreation • Number of times a species reproduces each year. • Humans can only procreate once in a given year. • Mice can have a litter of 10 – 14 pups every 6 to 8 weeks. • Sparrows produce up to 3 broods of chicks annually. 5/22/2017 6 Reproductive Lifespan • Age of sexual maturity & how many years reproduction is possible. • Humans need more than a decade to reach sexual maturity. • African elephants need 15 years to mature, but may reproduce to 90! • Dogs are mature at 1 year; they can reproduce for the rest of their lives. 5/22/2017 7 Carrying Capacity • • • • Population sizes go up and down, but like to be stable Stability = when the population is in balance Carrying Capacity = max # of individuals that the ecosystem can support Populations can exceed their environment’s carrying capacity, but not for long. 5/22/2017 8 Carrying Capacity • Example: Fluctuations in Elk & Wolf populations in Banff, Alberta 5/22/2017 9 Carrying Capacity • Example: Fluctuations in Snowshoe Hare & Lynx populations, British Columbia 5/22/2017 10 Carrying Capacity • Example: Human population from prehistory to modern day 5/22/2017 11 Population Density • Population size per unit area of habitat • Dense Populations = when there are a lot of organisms in a limited area • Density determines population change, also. Density Dependent Density Independent Factors Factors Food shortage Competition Disease Invasive species Predation 5/22/2017 Flood, fire… Pesticide use Climate change Drought Habitat loss 12