Title: Demographic PVA
1Demographic PVAs
- Assessing Population Growth and Viability
2Structured populations in a deterministic
environment
- Deterministic projection models, when we do not
have (or use) estimates of variation
3vector a representation of the population
structure
- It is a column of numbers that indicates the
densities of individuals in each class in the
population at one point in time
n(t)
4Each entry aij(t) in a projection matrix A(t)
gives the number of individuals in class i at
census (t1) produced on average by a single
individual in class j at census (t)
A(t)
5If we know the densities at census t n(t), we can
project the densities at the next census n(t1)
6If we know the densities at census t n(t), we can
project the densities at the next census n(t1)
7In a constant environment
- A(t)A
- Population convergence
8The stable distribution (w) is
The unique vector containing the ultimate
proportions of the population in each class given
the constant projection matrix A
The ultimate or long term growth rate (?) is
?10.6389
9The reproductive values (v) is
The relative contribution to future population
growth an individual currently in a particular
class is expected to make
Reproductive values take into account the number
of offspring an individual might produce in each
of the classes it passes through the future, the
likelihood of the individual reaching those
classes, the time required to do so, and the
population growth rate
10Eigenvalue sensitivities
- The ultimate rate of population growth in a
constant environment, ?1, depends on the
magnitudes of all the elements in A, so changing
any of them will change ?1. - Sij Sensitivity is a useful measure of how much
changes in a particular matrix element will
change ?1
11Sij Sensitivity
- It is the partial derivative of ?1 with respect
to aij - It measures the change in ?1 that would result
from a small change in aij , keeping all other
elements of the matrix A fixed at their present
values
12Sensitivities
13Sensitivity
Slope0.787
14How to include stochastic environmental effects
on matrix models?
15If environmental conditions are aperiodic and
uncorrelated, and moreover the probability of
choosing a particular matrix does not change over
time then environmental conditions are said to
be independently and identically distributed
or iid
Year 0 Matrix 2
Yar 1 matrix 2
Modeling using matrix selection
16Mountain golden heather
Number of realizations
Population size at t 50
17Modeling samples from matrices by time since
fire. In this (simplified) example, the fire
return interval is 3 years
Year 0 fire matrix
Use this
Year 1 matrix 1.1
Year 1 matrix 1.2
Year 1 matrix 1.3
or
or
Choose 1
Other years
or
Use this
Beyond interpolation, input pooled matrices
reset
fire
18Estimating the Stochastic log Growth rate ?s
LogN(t1)/N(t) over all pairs of adjacent years
19Estimating the Stochastic log Growth rate ?s
- Tuljapurkars approximation (an analytical
solution)
20Calculating Quasi-Extinction probability