Title: Ecology Populations
1Ecology- Populations -
2Populations
- POPULATION
- A group of individuals of a single species living
in the same general area.
3Populations - Characteristics
Attributes of Populations
1. Dispersion
- a measure of how organisms are distributed in
space
4Populations - Characteristics
1. Dispersion - can be Clumped
5Populations - Characteristics
1. Dispersion - can be Uniform
6Population Characteristics
1. Dispersion - can be Random
7Population Characteristics
Scale is important in dispersion
Uniform
Clumped
Clumped
8Population - Characteristics
2. Density
Number of organisms/unit area
Measurement depends on dispersion
9Population - Characteristics
2. Density
Immigration
Births
Population size
Emigration
Death
10Population - Growth
Factors which lead to population increase Birth
Immigration
Factors which lead to population decrease Death
Emigration
11Population - Growth
During any time interval
Change in population size in the time interval
Number of births in the time interval
Number of deaths in the time interval
-
DN Dt
-
B
D
(D or delta just means change)
12Population - Growth
We usually express birth and death as a rate per
individual
b the per capita birth rate so 40 births for
every 10,000 individuals is a birth rate of b
.004
m the per capita death rate so 10 deaths for
every 10,000 individuals is a death rate of m
.001
Note we do this so we can directly compare
populations of different sizes
13Population - Growth
This means that B bN
and that D mN
Birth rate
Death rate
Number of births
Population size
Number of deaths
Population size
14Population - Growth
Now our original population growth equation
DN Dt
-
B
D
Can be re-written as
DN Dt
bN - mN
15Population - Growth
And just to make it a bit simpler
b - m can be rewritten as r - the per capita rate
of increase
DN Dt
DN Dt
rN
bN - mN
16Population - Growth
DN Dt
rN
Is the same as
dN dt
rN
17Population - Growth
We finally get to the first kind of growth
equation Exponential population growth
-this assumes that populations will grow at their
maximum rate - rmax
So
dN dt
rmaxN
This means that in a given period of time (t) a
population will add a number of individuals equal
to its growth rate times the number of organisms
in the population
18Population - Growth
What does exponential growth look like?
- Kind of like a snowball effect
- starts slow but gets bigger
- at an increasing rate
19Population - Growth
What does exponential growth look like?
20Population - Growth
This can apply to any species
Human
Only difference is the time
21A Problem
Imagine you are studying a population of 1932
wombats
In one year - 73 births
- 38 deaths
Whats the change in the population size?
22A Problem
Imagine you are studying a population of 1932
wombats
b birth rate 73/1932 .0377
m death rate 38/1932 .0248
r(per capita or intrinisic rate of increase)
b - m .0377 - .0248 .0129
DN Dt
rN
.0129 x 1932 25
Next year the population is 1932 25 1957
23In year 2 - assume the same death and birth rates
Add - 1957 x .0129 25.2 individals
Year Begin End
After 100 years - 6,879.5 wombats
24Population - Growth
A second kind of population growth
From Gauses Paramecium experiments
?
P. aurelia alone
P. caudatum alone
25Population - Growth
A second kind of population growth
From Gauses Paramecium experiments
P. caudatum alone
P. aurelia alone
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
26Population - Growth
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
exponential
K - carrying capacity of the habitat
logistic
27Population - Growth
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
Remember equation for exponential growth
dN dt
rN
How do you get the line to flatten out??
28Population - Growth
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
How do you get the line to flatten out??
dN dt
(K - N) K
rN
29Population - Growth
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
What does this mean?
dN dt
(K - N) K
rN
Scenario 1 Population has just started growing
so N is small If N is small, this expression
is close to 1
Say K is 2000 and N 4 critters That would
make equal to 0.998 (or nearly1) and the
growth is close to exponential
(K - N) K
30Population - Growth
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
What does this mean?
dN dt
(K - N) K
rN
Scenario 2 Population is close to K so N is
large If N is large, this expression is close to
0
Say K is 2000 and N 1987 critters That would
make equal to 0.0065 (or nearly0) and the
growth is close to zero
(K - N) K
31Population - Growth
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
dN dt
(K - N) K
rN
(K - N) K
In this area is close to 0
(K - N) K
In this area is close to 1
32Population - Growth
LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH
33Population - Growth
The growth of a population can be influenced
by Demography - the vital statistics - specific
birth and death rates for organisms at a
particular ages.
Type I death rate higher in older indviduals
Type II death rate consistent
Type III death rate higher in younger
individuals
34Population - Growth
Growth of human populations
35Population - Growth
Growth of human populations
Why?
36Population - Growth
Growth of human populations
Chad
Canada
Italy
Egypt
37Population - Growth
Growth of human populations
Wheres it going??
38Population - Growth
Growth of human populations
Effects are different for each country