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14.3 Factors Affecting Population Change

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14.3 Factors Affecting Population Change The role of Density Generally, dense populations have lower birth rates, higher death rates, and slower growth rates than ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 14.3 Factors Affecting Population Change


1
14.3 Factors Affecting Population Change
2
The role of Density
  • Generally, dense populations have lower birth
    rates, higher death rates, and slower growth
    rates than less dense populations
  • Density-dependant factors are factors that limit
    population growth
  • 4 factors are significant disease, predation,
    parasitism and competition

3
  • Intraspecific competitonAs the number of
    raccoons in the forest increases, the
    availability of nesting sites limits population
    growth.
  • Disease Overpopulating rabbits in Australia were
    finally controlled by a disease spread through
    the population. A higher mortality rate was
    recorded in regions with large populations than
    small populations.

4
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5
  • Mangrove trees are often seen in the Florida
    everglades, their roots alternately exposed to
    the air, or submerged in water. Few tree species
    can survive such varied exposure. Mangroves can
    grow outside of the swamp, but rarely do. What
    are the ecological reasons for the unusual
    habitat of the mangrove.
  • decreasing interspecific competition
  • - while the swamp conditions are not optimal,
    there must be enough benefit to living where
    other trees cannot live very well
  • - the advantages of more available sunlight,
    space, nutrients outweigh the disadvantages of
    immersion/exposure

6
Predation
  • An ecological relationship in which one animal
    kills and eats another
  • Humans raise cattle for food, caring for them
    until they are slaughtered. This relationship can
    ultimately be described as predation
  • Predation is beneficial to one species, but
    usually lethal to the other
  • Wolves kill and eat deer. The wolves starve if no
    deer are present. The deer overpopulate and
    starve if their numbers increase. The
    relationship between wolves and deer is predation

7
The minimum viable population size
  • A population is considered at risk of becoming
    extinct when its number falls below the minimum
    viable population size
  • Low densities in populations can mean less
    genetic variation and less opportunities to mate

8
The Allee effect
  • Neanderthals may have died out when their birth
    rate became too low to offset their death rate.

9
Density independent factors
  • These factors limit population sizes through
    factors such as human intervention ( habitat
    destruction) or climate related events (droughts,
    floods, hurricanes)

10
Limiting Factor
  • Of all the resources that a population requires
    for growth, the one that is in shortest supply is
    the limiting factor
  • It determines how much the population can grow.
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