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Populations, Their changes and Their measurement IB syllabus: 2.1.6, 2.3.1, 2.3.2, 2.6.1-2.6.4, 2.7.2 AP syllabus Ch 9 Syllabus Statements 2.1.6: Define the terms species, population, habitat, niche, community and ecosystem with reference to local examples 2.3.1: Construct simple keys and use published keys for the identification of organisms 2.3.2: Describe and evaluate methods for estimating abundance of organisms 2.6.1: Explain the concepts of limiting factors and carrying capacity in the context of population growth 2.6.2: Describe and explain s and J population curves 2.6.3: Describe the role of density-dependent and densityindependent factors and internal and external factors, in the regulation of population 2.6.4: Describe the principles associated with survivorship curves including K and r-strategists 2.7.2: Describe and evaluate methods for measuring change in abiotic and biotic components of an ecosystem due to a specific human activity Vocabulary Abiotic factor Biotic factor Carrying Capacity Habitat K-strategist Population r-strategist Population A group of individuals of the same species found in the same area (habitat) at the same time The gopher tortoises in scrub habitats in Volusia county The bottlenose dolphins of the Indian River Lagoon Sea Otters: A case study Sea otters keystone species in Pacific kelp forests Daily consume 25% body weight in urchins & molluscs Population > 1 million before settlers arrived 1700’s hunted to near extinction – 1000 in the Aleutians, AK only 20 off California In 1971 A-bomb test in AK used sea otter population to assess bomb’s power 1000’s died 1973 Endangered Species Act passes, 1976 Marine Mammal Conservation Act 1989 1000’s died in Exxon Valdez Oil spill Otters recovering in most places after 1970’s The spring 2008 survey found 2760 sea otters, down 8.8-percent from the record 2007 spring survey. New Threats? Pollution Effects - Shellfish magnify toxins - Reduce disease resistance - Reduce fertility Increased Predation - Killer Whales - Switch to otters when other food is scarce Population characteristics Populations are dynamic – change in response to environment • Size (# of individuals) • Density (# of individuals in a certain space) • Dispersion (spatial pattern of individuals) Random, Uniform, Clumped based on food • Age distribution (proportion of each age) Changes called Population dynamics • Respond to environmental stress & change Common Dispersion Patterns Clumped (elephants) Uniform (creosote bush) Random (dandelions) Clumped is most common because resources have a patchy distribution. Limiting Factors & Population Growth 4 variables govern changes in population size • Birth, Death, Immigration, emigration Variables are dependent on resource availability & environmental conditions Population change = (Birth + Immigration)– (Death + Emigration) POPULATION SIZE Growth factors (biotic potential) Abiotic Favorable light Favorable temperature Favorable chemical environment (optimal level of critical nutrients) Biotic High reproductive rate Generalized niche Adequate food supply Suitable habitat Ability to compete for resources Ability to hide from or defend against predators Ability to resist diseases and parasites Ability to migrate and live in other habitats Ability to adapt to environmental change © 2004 Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning Decrease factors (environmental resistance) Abiotic Too much or too little light Temperature too high or too low Unfavorable chemical environment (too much or too little of critical nutrients) Biotic Low reproductive rate Specialized niche Inadequate food supply Unsuitable or destroyed habitat Too many competitors Insufficient ability to hide from or defend against predators Inability to resist diseases and parasites Inability to migrate and live in other habitats Inability to adapt to environmental change Capacity for Growth Capacity for growth = Biotic potential Rate at which a population grows with unlimited resources is intrinsic rate of increase (r) High (r) (1)reproduce early in life, (2)short generation time, (3)multiple reproductive events, (4)many offspring each time BUT – no population can grow indefinitely Always limits on population growth in nature Carrying Capacity Environmental resistance = all factors which limit the growth of populations Population size depends on interaction between biotic potential and environmental resistance Carrying capacity (K) = # of individuals of a given population which can be sustained infinitely in a given area Limiting Factors Carrying capacity established by limited resources in the environment Only one resource needs to be limiting even if there is an over abundance of everything else Ex. Space, food, water, soil nutrients, sunlight, predators, competition, disease A desert plant is limited by… Birds nesting on an island are limited by… Minimum Values (r) depends on having a certain minimum population size MVP – minimum viable pop. Below MVP • 1 – some individuals may not find mates • 2 – genetically related individuals reproduce producing weak or deformed offspring • 3 – genetic diversity may drop too low to enable adaptation to environmental changes –bottleneck effect Forms of Growth Exponential growth starts slow and proceeds with increasing speed • J curve results • Occurs with few or no resource limitations Logistic growth (1) exponential growth, (2) slower growth (3) then plateau at carrying capacity • S curve results • Population will fluctuate around carrying capacity Population Growth Curves Ideal © 2004 Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning Population size (N) Population size (N) K Time (t) Exponential Growth Time (t) Logistic Growth Carrying capacity alterations In rapid growth population may overshoot carrying capacity • Consumes resource base • Reproduction must slow, Death must increase • Leads to crash or dieback Carrying capacity is not fixed, affected by: • Seasonal changes, natural & human catastrophes, immigration & emigration Density Effects Density Independent Factors: effects regardless of population density Mostly regulates r-strategists • Floods, fires, weather, habitat destruction, pollution • Weather is most important factor Density Effects Density dependent Factors: effects based on amount of individuals in an area Operate as negative feedback mechanisms leading to stability or regulation of population External Factors • Competition, predation, parasitism • Disease – most epidemics spread in cramped conditions Internal Factors • Reproductive effects Density dependent fertility, Breeding territory size Natural Cycles: Predation Over longer time spans populations cycle Canadian lynx & Snowshoe hare - 10 year cycles Once thought that predators controlled prey #’s Top down control Now see a negative feedback mechanism in place community equilibrium Population size (thousands) 160 140 Hare 120 Lynx 100 80 60 40 20 0 1845 1855 1865 1875 1885 1895 Year 1905 1915 1925 1935 5,000 Moose population Wolf population 3,000 100 90 80 2,000 70 60 50 40 1,000 30 20 500 10 0 1900 1910 1930 1950 Year 1970 1990 2000 1999 Number of wolves Number of moose 4,000 Reproduction Strategies effect Survival Asexual reproduction • Produce clones of parents • Common in constant environments Sexual reproduction • Mating has costs – time, injury, parental investment, genetic errors • Improves genetic diversity survive environmental change • Different male & female roles in parental care MacArthur – Wilson Models Two idealized categories for reproductive patterns but really it’s a continuum r-selected & K-selected species depending on position on sigmoid population curve r-selected species: (opportunists) reproduce early, many young few survive • Common after disturbance, but poor competitors K-selected species: (competitors) reproduce late, few young most survive • Common in stable areas, strong competitors Carrying capacity K Number of individuals K species; experience K selection r species; experience r selection Time r-Selected Species cockroach dandelion Many small offspring Little or no parental care and protection of offspring Early reproductive age Most offspring die before reaching reproductive age Small adults Adapted to unstable climate and environmental conditions High population growth rate (r) Population size fluctuates wildly above and below carrying capacity (K) Generalist niche Low ability to compete Early successional species K-Selected Species elephant saguaro Fewer, larger offspring High parental care and protection of offspring Later reproductive age Most offspring survive to reproductive age Larger adults Adapted to stable climate and environmental conditions Lower population growth rate (r) Population size fairly stable and usually close to carrying capacity (K) Specialist niche High ability to compete Late successional species r versus K Most organisms somewhere in the middle Agriculture crops = r-selected, livestock = K-selected Reproductive patterns give temporary advantage Resource availability determines ultimate population size Survivorship curves 1. 2. 3. Different life expectancies for different species Survivorship curve: shows age structure of population Late loss curve: K-selected species with few young cared for until reproductive age Early loss curve: r-selected species many die early but high survivorship after certain age Constant loss curve: intermediate steady mortality Percentage surviving (log scale) 100 10 1 0 Age Humans Impact Natural Populations 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Fragmenting & degrading habitats Simplifying natural ecosystems Using or destroying world primary productivity which supports all consumers Strengthening pest and disease populations Eliminating predators Introducing exotic species Overharvesting renewable resources Interfering with natural chemical cycling and energy flow Environmental Stress Organism Level Population Level Ecosystem Level Physiological changes Psychological changes Behavior changes Fewer or no offspring Genetic defects Birth defects Cancers Death Change in population size Change in age structure (old, young, and weak may die) Survival of strains genetically resistant to stress Loss of genetic diversity and adaptability Extinction Disruption of energy flow through Disruption of biogeochemical food chains and webs cycles Disruption of biogeochemical Habitat cyclesloss & degradation Lower species species diversity diversity Lower Less complex food webs Habitat loss or degradation Lowercomplex stabilityfood webs Less Ecosystem collapse Lower stability Ecosystem collapse © 2004 Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning Sampling populations Step 1: Identify the organism Use dichotomous keys, field guides, observe a museum collection, or consult an expert http://www.earthlife.net/insects/orderskey.html#key Sample key for insect ID http://people.virginia.edu/~sosiwla/Stream-Study/Key/Key1.HTML Macroinvertebrate key Construct you Own Dichotomous Key Mark & Recapture Method Used for fish & wildlife populations Traps placed within boundaries of study area Captured animals are marked with tags, collars, bands or spots of dye & then immediately released After a few days or weeks, enough time for the marked animals to mix randomly with the others in the population, traps are set again The proportion of marked (recaptured) animals in the second trapping is assumed equal to the proportion of marked animals in the whole population Repeat the recapture as many times as possible to ensure accuracy of results Marking method should not affect the survival or fitness of the organism Mark & Recapture Calculation # of recaptures in second catch Total # in second catch = # marked in the first catch Total population (N) Assuming no births, deaths, immigration, or emigration population size is estimated as follows (Lincoln Index) N = (# marked in first catch) (Total # in second catch) # of Recaptures in second catch MEMORIZE THIS EQUATION Example 50 snowshoe hares are captured in box traps, marked with ear tags and released. Two weeks later, 100 hares are captured and checked for ear tags. If 10 hares in the second catch are already marked (10%), provide an estimate of N N = (50 hares x 100 hares) / 10 = 5000 / 10 = 500 hares **Realize for accuracy that you would recapture multiple times and take an average** Quadrat Method 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Used for plants or sessile organisms Mark out a gridline along two edges of an area Use a calculator or tables to generate two random numbers to use as coordinates and place a quadrat on the ground with its corner at these coordinates Count how many individuals of your study population are inside the quadrat Repeat steps 2 & 3 as many times as possible Measure the total size of the area occupied by the population in square meters Calculate the mean number of plants per quadrat. Then calculate the population size with the following equation Quadrat Method N = (Mean # per quadrat) (total area) Area of each quadrat This estimates the population size in an area Ex. If you count an average of 10 live oak trees per square hectare in a given area, and there are 100 square hectares in your area, then N = (10 X 100 hectare2) / 1 hectare2 = 1000 trees in the 100 hectare2 In addition to population size we can measure… Density = # of individuals per unit area • Good measure of overall numbers Frequency = the proportion of quadrats sampled that contain your species • Assessment of patchiness of distribution % Cover = space within the quadrat occupied by each species • Distinguishes the larger and smaller species How can changes in these populations be measured? Necessary because populations may change over time through processes like succession But also because human activities may impact a population and we want to know how • Impacts include toxins from mining, landfills, eutrophication, effluent, oil spills, overexploitation Measuring changes cont. Can still use CMR or quadrat method Just do it repeatedly over time Also could use satellite images taken over time 1. Do pre and post impact assessments in one area 2. Measure comparable areas – one impacted, one not at a given time Overexploitation, Agricultural use, Global Warming have Caused a decrease in Lake Chad’s area over last 50 years Lake Chad Satellite Images Capture – Mark Recapture Practice Problems Question 1 In a mark – recapture study of lake trout populations, 40 fish were captured, marked and released. In a second capture 45 fish were caught; 9 of these were marked. What is the estimated number of individuals in the lake trout population Question 2 Woodlice are terrestrial crustaceans that live under logs and stones in damp soils. To assess the population of woodlice in an area, students collected as many of the animals as they could find, and marked each with a drop of fluorescent paint. A total of 303 were marked. 24 hours later, woodlice were collected again in the same place. This time 297 were found, of which 99 were seen to be already marked from the first time. What approximately, is the estimated population of woodlice in this Review points 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Dispersion patterns Carrying capacity and limiting factors r and K selection Natural population cycles Human effects http://www.otterproject.org