Title: Brainstorm
1Brainstorm
- You and the person next to you will list 3
examples of.. - Abiotic and biotic factors that affect population
growth and decrease in size.
2Chapter 9
3Population Dynamics
- Studying how populations change in size, density,
age distribution, and population distribution. - Size number of individuals
- Density how many are in a certain area
- Age distribution proportion of each age group
- Population distribution how the organisms
arrange themselves in their habitat
4Population Distribution
Clumping Most common. Safety in numbers, social
interaction, mating and caring for young,
resources are clumped
Uniform Not as common. Used because of scarcity
of resources
Random Quite rare. Can be hard to determine
between truly random or largely clumpy
Most common.
5What goes up must come down
- Increases in population through birth or
immigration - Decreases in population through death or
emigration.
Deaths Emigration
Change in Population
Births Immigration
Note You should know difference between
Immigration Emigration!
6Age Structure
- What is expected to happen if a large of the
population is under the age of 10? - What is expected to happen if a large of the
population is over the age of 65? - What is expected to happen if there is an equal
distribution in age?
Growth will remain stable, then increase in 10-20
years
Growth will decrease
Growth remain stable
7What stage are you?
- Prereproductive stage Those not through puberty
reproductively immature. - Reproductive stage Those who are capable of
reproduction - Postreproductive stage Organisms that are too
old to reproduce. - Note while males are capable of reproduction
longer, survival of the fittest can prevent
them from breeding once they are too old.
8Old Bio StuffAbiotic vs. Biotic FactorsThat
limit population growth
Biotic
Abiotic
- Living factors
- Reproduction rates
- Food supply
- Habitat
- Resistance to disease
- Ability to adapt to change
- Not living
- Sunlight
- Temperature
- Climate
- Chemical environment
9Biotic potential growth
Environmental resistance decrease
10A population will increase if.
- A) Natality decreases
- B) Mortality increases
- C) Biotic potential increases
- D) The environmental resistance increases
11A population will increase if.
- A) Natality decreases
- B) Mortality increases
- C) Biotic potential increases
- D) The environmental resistance increases
12Any of these would take place for answer
C. Biotic potential growth
13Exponential or Logistic Growth Curve?
Boom and Bust
Boom then stable
14Logistic Growth
- Will see exponential growth at first introduction
to new environment. Video to follow this
lecture. - Then, growth will be limited by environmental
factors and will follow carrying capacity - S shaped
15Clearer view of J and S
16Going up
- Intrinsic rate of increase (r) is the rate the
population would grow if it had unlimited
resources. - Can be seen as the boom of the population.
- r species reproduce early in life, reproduce
often, have many offspring each time.
17Coming down
- Overshoot occurs when the population booms and
is too great for the resources to support - Overshoot is followed by dieback, or the sudden
decrease in population - Reproductive time lag the amount of time it
takes for the birth rate to fall and death rate
to rise. If the time lag is too long,
environmental damage can occur which further
limits the carrying capacity.
18(No Transcript)
19Population Graphs
(b) Irregular
20Population Graphs
(a) Stable
21Population Graphs
(c) Cyclic
22Population Graphs
(
(d) Irruptive
23Oscillations of the Two Populations Over Time
24Population Density
- Density-dependent controls Limits populations
that are too high. - Examples competition for food, shelter, water
disease parasites, predation - Density-independent controls Decreases
population regardless of size. - Examples weather, temperature, natural
disasters, habitat destruction, chemical changes
in the environment
25Whos in control here?
- Top-down control (Predator Controls Prey)
- Structure of lower trophic levels depends on
effect of consumers at high trophic levels. - Bottom-up control (Prey Controls Predator)
- Structure depends on prey availability and
nutrient content from low trophic levels - Example Hare population is controlled either by
the lynx killing it (top-down) or by large
numbers of hare using up their food source
(bottom-up)
26Lets talk about sexold bio stuff
- Asexual reproduction does not require sperm/egg.
Mitosis cell splitting. Bacteria reproduce
this way. Only 3 of all species use this form - Sexual reproduction requires sperm/egg, but not
necessarily intercourse/copulation - Disadvantages
- Males dont give birth
- Increased chance of genetic defect/error
- Courtship and mating rituals can be complex
- Advantages (get your mind out of the gutter!)
- Genetic variety/diversity
- Parents can divide responsibilities
27What species are you?
28Remember You are SPECIAL
29Species
r-selected Species
K-selected Species
- Found at bottom of population curve
- Reproduce early in life
- Reproduce frequently
- Large numbers of offspring
- Little to no parental care
- Boom and bust populations
- Examples
- Frogs
- Cockroach
- Dandelions
- Mice
- Most insects
- Found at top of population curve
- Reproduce later in life
- Reproduce less frequently
- Have less offspring at one time
- Lower infant mortality
- Logistic graph (stable at top)
- Examples
- Humans
- Elephants
- Whales
- Long-living plants (oaks, rain forest trees)
30R-selected Species or K-selected species?
31R-selected Species or K-selected species?
32R-selected Species or K-selected species?
33R-selected Species or K-selected species?
34R-selected Species or K-selected species?
35R-selected Species or K-selected species?
36R-selected Species or K-selected species?
HINT The Capybara is the largest rodent in the
world
37Survivorship Curves
- Early loss high infant mortality (fish, frogs)
- Constant loss death rate even among all ages
(song birds) - Late loss low infant mortality (humans,
elephants)
38Isolation isnt best
- Problems when small, isolated populations exist.
- Founder effect small group is geographically
isolated. May not have the genetic diversity to
survive (coloring, fur cover, etc) - Demographic bottleneck only a few surviving
individuals may not have the genetic diversity to
rebuild the population - Genetic drift some individuals breed
- more and dominate the gene pool
- (wolves)
- Inbreeding related individuals in an
- area mate. Can increase genetic
- defects.
39Tying in a few things from
40Oops! I did it again
- Past mistakes that need to be stopped
- Reducing biodiversity by destroying, fragmenting
and degrading habitats
41Oops! I did it again
- Past mistakes that need to be stopped
- Reducing biodiversity by simplifying natural
ecosystems (monocultures one type)
42Oops! I did it again
- Past mistakes that need to be stopped
- Unintentional strengthening of pest species and
anti-biotic resistant bacteria
43Oops! I did it again
- Past mistakes that need to be stopped
- Elimination of natural predators (wolves,
cougars, buffalo, eagles)
44Oops! I did it again
- Past mistakes that need to be stopped
- Over-harvesting renewable resources
45Oops! I did it again
- Past mistakes that need to be stopped
- Interfering with natural cycles in natural
46Oops! I did it again
- Past mistakes that need to be stopped
- Over dependence on fossil fuels
474 Guidelines for a Sustainable Future
- Our lives and economies are dependant on the
earth and sun. They dont depend on us. - Everything is interconnected.
- You cant change only one thing in nature
- We cannot sustain our civilization if we deplete
the natural capital. We must live off the
biological interest of that capital.
48Population Control
Solar Energy
PRINCIPLES OF SUSTAINABILITY
Nutrient Recycling
Biodiversity