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Lecture 2 Summary • Geometric growth model -- used when there is a discrete breeding season. • Exponential growth model-- used when populations are growing continuously • Intrinsic growth rate--- r = births – deaths • Because of “Environmental Resistance” population growth decreases as density reaches a “carrying capacity” (K). The graph of individuals vs. time yields an S-curved growth curve. This is logistic growth. • Density independent growth - changes in physical environmental factors (generally climatic changes), which lead to dramatic shifts in populations. Density dependent growth – usually applied to larger organisms (vertebrates) or sessile organisms (barnacles); biotic interactions (competition, predation) are important. Lecture 2 Summary • Life Tables are the main tool for demographers, and they have 2 main components. Survivorship schedules – average # of individuals that survive to any particular age; Fertility schedules (fecundity) – average # of daughters produced by one female in each life stage • Net reproductive rate (Ro) is the average number of daughters produced by a female in her lifetime. It is the summation of the products of the fecundity (Lx) and mortality (Mx) values • r selection predominates in areas with high density-independent mortality. r-selected organisms grow rapidly, reproduce early in life with large numbers of offspring, and then disperse to other habitats. • K Selection predominates in stable environments. K-selected organisms grow amd nature slowly, reproduce repeatedly and usually produce few offspring at a time. • For organisms with modular growth r and K have no meaning because colonial growth allows them to have incredibly long life spans. A common theme is that under stressful conditions organisms with modular growth turn on sexual reproduction for dispersal REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Compare the assumptions of the geometric vs. the exponential growth models. 2. What is carrying capacity and what factors are thought to be responsible for its existence? 3. Compare density independent and density dependent growth graphically. 4. Explain how cohort and static life tables differ. 5. Show graphically the three idealized types of survivorship curves. 6. What is Ro and what does it tell you about the condition of a population? 7. Describe the differences between r and K selection and give examples of the types of species associated with each. 8. Why do the concepts of r and K selection have little meaning for species with modular growth? Reproduction and Recruitment Reproduction • Sexual – Hermaphroditism -protandrous, protogynous and simultaneous (inverts, fish) – Dioecious (mammals, fish, inverts) – External fertilization (invertebrates, fish) – Internal fertilization (mammals, inverts, sharks) • Asexual – – – – Fragmenting (corals) Rhizomal (Sea grasses) Budding (hydroids) Division (anemones) To have sex or not? • Asexual reproduction good in stable habitats – Easily propagate, spread, compete, waste no time or energy on sex, local distribution • Sexual reproduction good in unstable habitats – Allows for genetic variability, plasticity Dispersal and Recruitment: Production of Larvae • Many marine animals release huge numbers of eggs. – Even so, rates of fertilizations are thought to be <20% for a wide range of invertebrates • Sperm are short-lived (a few hours at most) • In most cases, sperm concentrations are rapidly diluted by currents and waves • Donors are sparse Dispersal and Recruitment: Production of Larvae (cont) • Behavioral modifications can overcome sperm limitation – Mollusks can form spawning aggregations – Barnacles use internal fertilization Fertilisation • Internal fertilisation – Requires males and females to meet – Rare in sessile organisms (but does occur: for example barnacles) • External fertilisation – Release of eggs and sperm into sea – Requires eggs and sperm to meet Most marine invertebrates spawn eggs and sperm into the sea Broadcasters vs Brooders • Broadcast spawning – shed eggs and sperm into water column (most fish, echinoderms) • Internal fertilization – females collect sperm from water column and fertilize eggs internally (Sponges, cnidarians mollusks, ascidians) – copulation with male placing sperm inside female reproductive tract (gastropods, crust., sharks, mammals) Sexual ReproductionHermaphroditism • A single individual has gonads that can produce gametes of both sexes • A single individual can produce gametes of either sex at different times in it life (sequential hermaphrodites) – protandry male to female – protogony female to male Protoandry • Function as Males first • Found among species in which small males are able to spawn with large female Ex. Clown fish – Males are small, females large and territorial – Removal of female causes male to switch – A juvenile then becomes male Protogyny • Often Male maintains territory with harem of females; size of males matters • If male is removed, one female changes to male – Behavior (immediately) – Gonads (a few days) • Major rearrangement of anatomy, physiology, hormones, and behavior (Need not be a pure strategy - gonochoristic males and females can exist within population) Synchronous hermaphrodite • Gonad has sperm and eggs • Often a monogamous pair takes turns playing male and female role - Ensures no cheating • ex. Hamlets (coral reef) Protogynous Male Female Size Eggs produced or fertilized Eggs produced or fertilized WHY? Size Advantage Hypothesis Lifetime fitness and size Protoandrous Female Male Size Strange reproductive practices of fish • Hermaphrodites • Sex change (born one sex, become the other) Large fish in harems are often sex-change males (protogony) Large fish in non-harem species are often sex-change females (protandry) • Parasitic males • “Sneaker” males that look like females • Sex-role reversal (male pregnancy in seahorses) • Males often do parental care in fish Rainbow wrasse Thalassoma lucasanum Two types of males Two types of reproduction. 1) Females (yellow/red lateral stripes) 2) Primary males (look like females) 3) Terminal males (blueheads) - born female, turn into males http://www.oceanoasis.org/fieldguide/thal-luc.html Rainbow wrasse T. lucasanum Two types of reproduction 1) Broadcast spawning Many males and females rush to surface and release gametes http://www.oceanoasis.org/fieldguide/thal-luc.html 2) Harems: one terminal male guards group of females and mates with them individually. Death of secondary malelarge female turns into new terminal male Belted sandbass Gulf of Mexico (St. Andrews) Serranus subligarius (belted sand bass) Simultaneous hermaphrodite (can act as male or female at any time) -dominant male in harem mates with “females”. Parental care • • • • • • Preparation of nests or burrows Egg guarding Production of large yolky eggs Care of young (inside or outside body Provisioning of young (before or after birth) Care of offspring after independence Seasonality • Seasonal Reproduction – Short reproductive phases where high percentage of individuals are reproductively active – Small eggs, high fecundity and synchronized gamete development within individuals and within the population. Seasonality cont’d • Year-round reproduction (1) Asynchronous • Individuals have discrete gamete production • Not synchronized within the population (2) Continuous • Most adults within population contain gametes year round Dispersal and Recruitment • The importance of recruitment has been recognized by marine ecologists for nearly a century, but only in the past 15-20 yrs have they recognized recruitment as a centerpiece of population and community models. – It is a common sense notion that an empty patch of habitat will be uninhabited by a given species if its propagules are unable to reach it. – If true then the intensity of density dependent interactions will be determined by the degree to which settlement is successful Definitions • Recruitment is the addition of new individuals to a populations or to successive life stages within a population Pre- and Post Settlement Processes Immigration Birth (Recruitment) + + - Population Size Emigration Mortality Dispersal and Recruitment: causes of variation in recruitment • • • • • Production of larvae Dispersal of larvae in the plankton Risk of mortality while dispersing Larval settlement success Growth and survival of settlers until they get counted as new recruits Many marine species have ‘bipartite’ life histories 1. Planktonic dispersive early stage PLANKTONIC LARVAE 2. Benthic or site attached adult stage *Larva: an independent, often freeliving, developmental stage that undergoes changes in form and size to mature into the adult. SETTLEMENT REPRODUCTION BENTHIC ADULTS More marine-terrestrial differences: you don’t see the bipartite lifestyle often on land Dispersal and Recruitment: Complex Life Cycles Dispersal and Recruitment: Complex Life Cycles Marine organisms: complex life cycles Recruitment is a multi-step process Four major accomplishments of recruitment: 1) Dispersal & survival in water column 2) Settlement in an appropriate site 3) Successful metamorphosis into adult body form 4) Post-settlement survival and growth until detected by an observer 1 cm Three basic modes of larval development Direct -- essentially no larval stage Larval stage encapsulated, internally brooded or bypassed entirely Lecithotrophic -- “yolk feeding” Nonfeeding larval stage. Larvae do not require food to complete development. Planktonic lifespan is typically short (minutes to days) Planktotrophic -- “plankton feeding” Feeding larval stage. Larvae are incapable of completing development without feeding Planktonic lifespan typically long (days to months) Thorson’s rule: a latitudinal cline in pelagic larvae in gastropods % Species with Pelagic Development 100 Thorson’s data for gastropods, interpreted by Mileikovsky, reveals a clear latitudinal cline in the proportion of species reproducing via a pelagic larva 80 60 40 20 0 Red data: northern hemisphere White data: southern hemisphere 0 30 60 Latitude 90 For most marine species, we have NO idea where larvae go Larval behavior can allow for retention Tidal Flow – Flood tide Tidal Flow – Ebb tide Vertical migration can result in retention of larvae within estuary: larvae rise on flood tide, and sink on ebb Typical life cycle of marine organisms Planktonic dispersal Pelagic larvae Roughly 80% of all marine organisms (> 90,000 currently described species of vertebrates, invertebrates & algae) have a biphasic life cycle and produce planktonic propagules Sedentary Benthic adults Cue detection & metamorphosis Typical life cycle of marine organisms Planktonic dispersal Pelagic larvae Problem with swimming larvae: water motion often carries them away from appropriate habitat Water flow in the ocean is complex -internal waves, longshore drift, winddriven currents and eddies can all affect where larvae end up Sedentary Benthic adults Cue detection & metamorphosis Typical life cycle of marine organisms Planktonic dispersal Pelagic larvae Cues used to assess habitats can be chemical or physical, and larvae often respond to some combination of multiple cues Cues can be positive or negative Sedentary Benthic adults Cue detection & metamorphosis Ecological consequences: egg size, larval type and dispersal • Larval type is related to egg size – Feeding (planktotrophic) larvae hatch from small eggs – Non-feeding (lecithotrophic) larvae hatch from larger eggs • Egg size dictates fecundity – Females produce more small eggs than large ones (fecundity/egg size trade-off) • Feeding larvae tend to spend longer in plankton, and hence have the potential to disperse further Dispersal scale (km) Dispersal potential is related to gene flow and hence speciation 100 10 1 0.1 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 Planktonic larval duration (days) Data from Siegel et al., MEPS, 260: 83-96 (2003) How does an aggregation begin? Someone had to be the first one to settle, and they didn’t respond to other adults! Desperate Larva Hypothesis: larvae search for suitable site until they run out of energy and then take whatever they can find rather than die in the water column Founders & Aggregators: Some species produce two distinct types of larvae: one type seeks out adults of their own species, the other is specifically a ‘pioneer’ larva that seeks new uninhabited, bare surfaces to colonize. If the ‘pioneer’ larva survives and grows into an adult, it can form the nucleus of a new aggregation. Gregarious settlement Gregarious settlement • Larvae settle on (or very near) adults of the same species •Identifying settlement cues is difficult and not many larval inducers have been conclusively identified •Many species cannot move after settlement & even those that can need to feed soon •Larvae settling with adults can obviously tell that site will be able to support them after they settle Settlement choice • Bacteria probably play an important role, but exact effects are unknown for all but a couple of species • Physical cues associated with flow conditions at site of settlement are frequently important • Chemical cues (e.g., from food source or conspecifics) frequently play a role, also Do numbers of settlers reflect number that eventually recruit to the assemblage? • Barnacles (Bertness et al., 1996) – Yearly differences in number and distribution of larval settlers, reflecting wind effect on larval populations • Scallops (Peterson & Summerson, 1992) – Variability in spat explained 71% variability in recruitment in 1988, but only 4% in 1989 • Lobsters (Hernkind & Butler, 1994) – No relation between settlers and subsequent recruits over 3 years in Florida So, the answer is… sometimes Post-settlement mortality Organisms only recruit to population (establish) if they survive after settlement Taxon Weekly Annual Polar survival % mortality % survival % Ascidians Barnacles Bryozoans Bivalves Gastropods Decapods Echinoids Octocorals Polychaetes ~71 ~88 ~94 ~86 ~91 ~93 ~86 ~92 ~93 75-100 92-100 99-100 90-99 10-100 ~99 90-99 75-95 90-99 ND 95-100 89-100 90-100 ND ND ND ND 90-100 Little suggestion that mortality higher in polar regions Causes of post-settlement mortality • • • • • • Delay of metamorphosis Biological disturbance Physical disturbance Physiological stress Predation Competition for space or food Physical and chemical defenses of larvae Physical -- spines & bristles • make it difficult for small fish & invertebrate predators to swallow them Chemical -- chemical defenses make larvae distasteful • some chemical defenses just taste bad • others have more dramatic effects – some coral and tunicate larvae make fish vomit immediately after ingesting a larva Other -- larvae may have behavioral or physical adaptations to avoid detection • larvae may be transparent, or only active at night when it is difficult to see them So Why Disperse? • High probability of local extinction – • Spread your young over a variety of habitats – • evens out the probability of mortality Maybe it has nothing to do with dispersal at all – • Therefore, best to export juveniles just a feeding ground in the plankton for larvae? Life history theory predicts species in marine environments do best when they ‘hedge their bets’ – some larvae recruit to adult habitats and others disperse to try new habitats Dispersal: Metapopulations Sources and Sinks How do we Design an What is the optimal network design? Effective Network? We need a much better understanding of larval dispersal Migratory patterns • Anadromous - breed in freshwater and living in seawater – salmon, shad, sea lamprey • Catadromous - Adults live in in freshwater then migrate to seawater to spawn – eels Anguilla • Oceanodromous- live totally in seawater – herring cod and plaice Catadromous - breed at sea, migrate into rivers to grow (16 spp freshwater eels) adults spawn and die in Sargasso Sea / larvae in plankton 1 yr+/ metamorphose into juveniles / grow and mature in rivers Figure 8.22 Salmon (Anadromous) Spend lives at sea feeding, return to rivers to breed: Magnetic field and smell of home rivers Skipjack tuna (Oceanodromous) Tropical species that travels to temperate water to feed. Halfway across globe each year. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFC96vg WNC4 first spawn of the season Coral spawning (Lindsey et al.) http://www.flickr.com/photos/usfwspacific/5764 239282/ http://web.me.com/russellkelley/rk/The_Spawni ng.html Sponge spawning http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zfwd687DHQ Fish spawning http://www.arkive.org/brownsurgeonfish/acanthurus-nigrofuscus/video11a.html Mass spawning of the rainbow wrasse Thalassoma lucasanum