Title: Chapter 4, Population Biology
1Chapter 4, Population Biology
- Try taking the online practice quiz at
http//www.glencoe.com/qe/science.php?qi2495 - for practice.
24.1 Population Dynamics
- Population growth an increase in size of
population over time. - Can be studied in bacterial increase on nutrient
agar, or growth of organisms in a new
environment. - Most growth is linear, but populations increase
exponentially (at first slowly, and then an
increasingly rapid pace.
3Linear growth vs. Exponential growth
Linear growth a steady Increase over time
(no acceleration) like earning 6 each hour.
Exponential growth an increase that is
initially slow and then proceeds with increasing
rate (an accelerating growth). Two flies becomes
4, Then 8, then 16, 32, 64, 128, 256
See fig.4.2 and 4.3, p.96,97.
4- It has been estimated that a pair of reproducing
fruit flies would bury us all (on earth) to a
depth of around 991 million miles, if allowed to
reproduce without limitations for a year. See
math below (from L.Higley, UNL) - Since we dont see this, what, then, prevents it
from occurring? - Limiting factors available food, space to live,
competition, predation - This growth vs. limits creates a carry
capacitynumber of organisms of one species an
environment can support.
e.g., fruit flies - one pair yields 30
generations/year with 40 eggs/ pair with a 11
sex ratio unlimited reproduction for a single
year would produce a layer of fruit flies over
the earth ca. 991 million miles deep 4029 2
2.882 x 1046 flies, assume each fly is 1 x 1 x 1
mm earth is 4/3 x Pi x 4000 miles x 1.852 x 106
mm/mile1.836 x 1015 cubic mm in volume solve
for radius in miles cube root of (2.882 x
1046)/(1.836 x 1016) x 3/4Pi) 1.836 x 1015 mm
(1.836 x 1015/1.852 x 106) - 4000 9.914 x 108
miles
5- When population is below carrying capacity,
births exceed deaths until carrying capacity is
reached. - When population exceeds C.C., deaths tend to
exceed births until C.C. is reached. - Thus population tend to the C.C. as a stable
equilibrium. - Carrying capacity is often symbolize as K.
- There are two strategies or styles of living.
- (A) Organisms can have few young, care for each
one extensively (invest a lot of energy in it)
and thus give them a better opportunity to
survive. (Elephants do this). Called a
K-strategy (counting on the stable carrying
capacity). - (B) Organisms can have many young, use little
energy/care on them, and plan for few to survive,
counting on the numbers in reproduction to carry
their survival. Called an r-strategy because
they are counting on/emphasizing reproduction
(ticks do this).
6- Organisms that live in a very stable environment,
where competition advantages and parental
investment are important do better with a
K-strategy, especially if they are long-lived. - Organisms that are invaders, live under
unpredictable conditions or are short-lived do
better with an r-strategy - Different organisms have different degrees of
these to suit their lives
7Population growthlimiting factors
Crowdingstress in some creatures Factors arent
well understood, but effects include agression,
lessened parental care, more disease and
decreased fecundity.
- Abiotic and biotic factors had to do with living
or not. - Another way to look at this is to consider
factors to be Density dependent, or Density
independent. - Density dependent factors depend on how many of
the organisms are around (ie., if the population
is more crowded, more of them will die of
disease). Other examples include competition,
food supplies, predation, parasites. - Predator/prey can follow a close pattern of
cyclical relationships showing mutual effects,
see p.102
8- Density independent factors act on the population
regardless of numbers the same way (ie., a cold
frost will kill the same proportion of chiggers,
regardless of total numbers). - Examples usually abiotic factors such as
temperatures, storms, floods, drought, habitat
disruption.
94.2 Human population growth
- There were about 10 million people around 10,000
years ago. Today there are over 6 billion. - What the carrying capacity of earth is depends on
many unknowns (increased food supply, crowding,
etc. At some point, food is likely to be
outstripped by growth if the population doesnt
level off for other reasons. - Demography is the study of human population
growth characteristics.
10- Factors in demography growth rate, age
structure, geographic distribution. - Human population has increased exponentially over
time thus far (this isnt sustainablewhat will
limit it is the question in time. Our ability to
kill competition, control disease and increase
food supply have sustained the exponential
increase thus far. - Growth rate is difference between birth rate and
death rate. - Sometimes expressed as doubling rate (how long to
double the population).
11- As the 21st Century dawns, the world faces the
prospect of a new and complex food crisis that
will require better ways of ensuring that the
hungry and the malnourished will be able to meet
their food needs (James D. Wolfensohn, President
of the World Bank). To tackle this enormous
challenge, the international community must
launch a new "Green Revolution", more powerful
and encompassing than the one that thirty years
ago that doubled production of key crops such as
rice and wheat. The power of science and
information technology must be harnessed for the
benefit of the worlds poor. "New scientific
developments have the potential to radically
reshape the worlds agriculture and food systems
according to Mahendra Shah the co-author of the
book, Food in the 21st Century From Science to
Sustainable Agriculture. "We need to recommit to
science and research to ensure that the poor are
not excluded, and that biodiversity and the
environment are not undermined." - Today, there are more than 840 million people a
number exceeding the combined population of
Europe, US, Canada and Japan who do not have
enough to eat. Every minute, some 30 people die
of hunger in the developing world and half of
these are infants and children. A medium
projection is for world population to reach about
8.3 billion by 2025, before hopefully stabilizing
at about 10-11 billion toward the end of the 21st
century. At least in the foreseeable future,
plants and especially cereals will continue
to supply much of our increased food demand, both
for direct human consumption and as livestock
feed to satisfy the rapidly growing demand for
meat in the newly industrializing countries. It
is likely that an additional 1 billion tonnes of
grain will be needed annually by 2025. Most of
this increase must be supplied from lands already
in production, through yield improvements. - Food production will have to increase by more
than 50 percent to feed an additional two billion
people by 2025. But the challenge is far more
intricate than simply producing more food.
Conditions are very different than they were on
the eve of the Green Revolution. To prevent a
crisis, the world community must simultaneously
confront the issues of poverty, food insecurity,
environmental degradation, and erosion of genetic
resources. - ..C.Reimers-Hild, UNL Module 1.5, 2003.
- http//www.worldbank.org/poverty/quiz/
- http//web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/EXTABOUTU
S/0,,contentMDK20040558menuPK34559pagePK34542
piPK36600,00.html
12- Declining death rate in industrialized countries
has greater effect than increased birth rate. - You are more likely to live a bit longer than I
am (each generation living a little longer. - Fertility (number of offspring produced by a
female in reproductive years) is decreasing
(mostly folks waiting longer to have childrenis
this a K-strategy? fewer offspring, more time
invested, more energy). - Compare birth/death/fertility rates to overall
population change in Table 4.2, p.105.
Mr. Gthe early years.
13- Age structure is important factor. How many of
these people are teenagers or 65? - Makes difference in likely population increase
(see Fig.4.11, p.107 and compare Mexico to
Germany to see what is meant by this). - A wide base population means large percentage are
young, and likely to reproduce and add more to
population size.
14(No Transcript)
15Mobility
- Humans move in and out of populations.
- Emigration moving out of a given population
(think Exit). - Immigration moving into a population (think In).
The U.S. scutinizes immigrants b/c they are
coming into the country. - Mobility doesnt change total population, but
alters local/national levels and makes prediction
one step more complicated. - Wars, economic opportunities or lack of them.
- E/Immigration on local scale cause changes in
urban/rural populations, growth in some
neighborhoods over othersdriven by
necessity/opportunity or plain ol desire to live
with others of like mind.
16The End
- But only the middle, on the human population
growth curvewhat will the future bring?