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APES Review 6 Populations Population Ecology-Populations interact with the environment. -Useful understanding for Conservation efforts -Most organisms live in groups Adv.: protection from predators, increased mating, division of labor Factors that Affect Population Viability: - Environmental Conditions - Birth Rate - Presence of competitors - Predatory defense mechanisms - Resistance to disease - Ability to migrate - Ability to adapt - Food supply Biotic Potential -Max. rate at which a pop. Can grow. -Resources are unlimited -factors that affect biotic pot.: age at reproduction, freq. of reprod., # of offspring, life span, death rate J Curves - Happens when a pop is left unchecked. (exponential) (arithmetic-linear) (geometric – exponential) S Curves Population growth reaches carrying capacity and levels out. - Density dependent - Initial growth due to unlimited resources, but pop stabilizes when resources become scarce. r-strategists – small body, grow fast, pops. Grow exponentially, then crash, large populations, unstable environments, low diversity, low resources, offspring independent soon, type III survorship, weeds, insects, rodents etc. Density-Dependent Factors - Intensifies as pop. Size increases. Greater effect on individuals - Less food, fewer offspring, limited terretories, predators concentrate on smaller groups r-strategists Reproductive Char. -mature rapidly -short life span -tend to be prey -many offspring (overreproduce) -low parental care -not endangered -pop size limited by Dens. Dep. factors Historical Human Population Sizes - pop boom due to low death rate - 1900 – death rate 1 .7% 2000 -= .9 % - Increased food production, more efficient distribution of food, medical, sanitation, health and hygiene improvements, safer water K-strategists Reproductive Char. -mature slowly -long lived -both predator and prey -high parental care cockatoo Carrying Capacity - Max. # of ind. that can be supported by the resources available in a given population. - CC will decrease with environmental decline. - Regulatory Factors- food, space, O2, nutrients, sunlight - If CC decreases, the pop. Decreases - If pop. Exceeds the CC, pop will not be sustained. Thomas Malthus - 1798 mathmatician Theorized exponential growth. - Malthusian catastrophe – pop. Growth outpaces agricultural production. Back to subsistence. - Economics or unequal distribution cause malnutrition and starvation. Density-Independent Factors - unrelated to pop. Size and affect all individuals. - weather, climate, natural disasters, seasonal changes, hurricanes and fires K-strategists – opposite of r Human Population Surges - use of tools and fire - agricultural revolution - industrial lrevolution with better medical technologies Population Change Calculation (BR +immigration) – (DR + emigration) Ex. In 1950 pop was 20,000. BR = 25 per 1,000. DR = 7/1,000. IM = 600 per year, EM=200/yr Rule of 70 Doubling time = 70 yrs/annual rate of population change (%) Pop Growth 8000BCE-5000BCE Pop Growth 5000BCE-1650CE Pop Growth 1650BCE-Present Pop Growth Present-2050 Human Pop. Distribution Questions: 1. Of the following terms for population growth graphs, which are synonymous? Logistical, logarithmic, exponential, sigmoidal, J-shaped, S-shaped 2. Draw a labeled example graph of a population that is growing exponentially and one that is growing logistically 3. Describe the differences in situations that result in the two types of graphs drawn I n the previous question. 4. Predict outcomes of exponential population growth and logistic population growth. 5. Draw a graph with the independend axis as “latitude”and the dependent axis as the “number of species”. What would the graph look like. 6. For any (or several different) regions(s) of the earth, name a species that is non-native in each category: river animal, terrestrial animal, terrestrial plant, terrestrial fungus. Describe how each species was introduced, its niche, its survival strategy and the specific way(s) in which it has impacted the local flora and fauna. 7. What is the difference between a keystone and an indicatory species? 8. Using an example, explain how competition between species and within a species is dealt with over time. 9. Using an example, explain each term: symbiosis, predation, parasitism, mutualism, co-evolution, mimicry, and commensalism. 10. Explain succession by giving an example of the progression of an ecosystem from primary succession into late secondary succession. How long would this process take and how would the biotic and abiotic factors change over this time. 11. Describe what is meant by carrying capacity. Explain how populations can exist far above or below the carrying capacity. 12. Name three density-dependent and three density- independent factors that affect carrying capacity. 13. Give an aquatic and terrestrial example of a species that is an r-selected species and list 5 characterisitics of the niche/survival strategy of each. Repeat the process for a K-selected species. 14. Graph the predicted growth patterns of an r-selected species and a K-selected species introduced to a new environment. Describe the advantages and disadvantages of each type of species. 15. Name 3 fast-growing countries, one with a large population, one with a medium size population and one with a relatively small population. Do the same for three slow-growing countries. 16. Define TFR and explain why it must drop below the replacement value in order to achieve ZPG. 17. Name 5 things (in order from the greatest to the least impact) that affect population growth. Support your response with facts and examples. 18. Draw an age structure histogram for a country with rapid growth, zero growth, slow growth, and negative growth