Title: POPULATION ECOLOGY
1POPULATION ECOLOGY
2ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Office Hours
- NEXT Mon Wed following lecture (3 -5 pm)
- Final Exam Is In ONE WEEK
- Final will consist of 50 new material
- Review exams I II
3ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Next section (Population Ecology) requires basic
math skills - NO CALCULATORS!!!!
4ECOLOGY
- Ecology
- The study of how populations interact with their
environment
5LEVELS OF BIOLOGY
- Individuals
- Populations
- Group of individuals of same species occupying
given area - Communities
- Ecosystems
- Global Biosphere
6POPULATION CHARACTERISTICS
- Demographics
- Vital statistics of a population
- Pop Size
- Total number of indiv.s in pop
- Pop Density
- Number of indiv.s per unit area
- Age Structure
- Number of individuals in each age category
7PROPERTIES OF POPULATIONS
- Parameters
- Birth rate b
- Death rate d
- Immigration I
- Arrival of new residents from another pop
- Emigration E
- Permanent movement of individuals out of pop
- b I add individuals to a pop
- d E remove them
8PROPERTIES OF POPULATIONS
- Assuming NO Immigration/Emigration
- If b gt d, then population is growing
- If b lt d, then population is decreasing
- If b d, then population is stable
9PROPERTIES OF POPULATIONS
- More Parameters
- N Population size
- t Time
- ? N Change in population size
- ? t Change in time
10POPULATION GROWTH MODELS
- Two Models
- Logistic Growth
- Exponential Growth
11MALTHUSIAN GROWTH
- Thomas Malthus (1798)
- Believed that population growth (geometric
growth) would exceed the food supply - Result people will run out of food!
12MALTHUSIAN GROWTH
987654321
Food
People
Number Of People Food Units
1 2 3 4 5 6
Days
13EXPONENTIAL (Geometric) GROWTH
987654321
- Population Growth as Compound Interest
- You have 100 in the bank at
- compound interest of 10 per day
- After 1 day you will have
- After 2 days you will have
Of Individuals
1 2 3 4 5 6
Days
14EXPONENTIAL GROWTH MODEL
- To calculate population growth, you have to look
at - Per capita rate of growth
- Analogous to the compound interest rate
- Number of individuals in the population at time t
- Analogous to the amount of in the bank at time
t.
15High r
EXPONENTIAL GROWTH
500
Moderate r
400
300123 Q
Population size (N)
Low r
200
100
Very low r
0
1
5
0
2
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
Generations
16EXPONENTIAL GROWTH MODEL
Exponential Growth
Number Of Individuals
r 0.47
Time
- r Intrinsic rate of natural increase
- Physiological ability of an individual to
contribute to population growth - r b d
17POPULATION GROWTH PROBLEMS
- Birth, Death Intrinsic Increase
- Ex 2,000 mice in a cornfield
- 1,000 babies are born in a single month
- Whats the per capita birth rate (number of
babies born per individual in the population per
month)?
18POPULATION GROWTH PROBLEMS
- Birth, Death Intrinsic Increase
- Suppose 200 mice die in the same month
- What's the per capita death rate (number of
deaths per individual in the population per
month)?
19POPULATION GROWTH PROBLEMS
- Birth, Death Intrinsic Increase
- What is the per capita rate of increase (r )?
20POPULATION GROWTH PROBLEMS
- Under Optimal (Exponential) Conditions
- What is the overall rate of population growth?
(?N/?t OR dN/dt)
21POPULATION GROWTH PROBLEMS
- Next month, the population of mice should be
composed of ____________ individuals ? - (HINT think of compound interest example!)
-
-
22POPULATION GROWTH PROBLEMS
- Continuously Expanding Cockroach Population
- If rmax 0.09 roaches/day, what is the rate of
population growth when the population consists of
1000 cockroaches?
23ASSUMPTIONS OF EXPONENTIAL MODEL
- No variation between individuals
- Closed population
- Constant b d
- Reproduction at physiological capacity
- Population growth is continuous continues
indefinitely - Abundant food resources
- Growth is density-independent
24SHORTCOMINGS OF THE EXPONENTIAL
MODEL
- Exponential Growth Cannot Be Sustained!
- No pop. can continue to grow indefinitely
- All pops eventually reach carrying capacity of
their habitat - At high densities, growth becomes
density-dependent
25DENSITY DEPENDENT FACTORS
- Factors That Intensify as Population Size
Increases - Accumulation of wastes
- Predation (sometimes)
- Competition
- Stress?
- Phermonal inhibition?
26DENSITY-DEPENDENT FACTORS
- Populations Subject to Density Regulation
- Negative feedback on growth rate as result of
density - b and d change due to crowding
- births decrease
- deaths increase
- Realized Growth lt rmax
- Result logistic growth
-
27HIGH POPULATION DENSITY DECREASED
SURVIVORSHIP
28HIGH POPULATION DENSITY DECREASED
FECUNDITY
29THE LOGISTIC MODEL
- Predicts Limited Population Growth
- Population size limited by available resources
- Food
- Minerals
- Water
- Habitat
- Refuge from predators
- Carrying Capacity (K)
- Limit beyond which environment cannot support
additional individuals
30 LOGISTIC MODEL OF POPULATION GROWTH Incorporates
carrying capacity (K) of environment
K
K
Population size
Time
31LOGISTIC MODEL
- Rate of Population Change
- dN/dt rmax N (K-N)
-
K -
- As N approaches K, resources are more limited
- Population growth slows and eventually stops
when N K - (K-N) proportion of unused resources
- K
32LOGISTICAL PROBLEMS
- Back To The Roaches
- If the cockroaches were in an environment with a
carrying capacity of 1500 individuals, how would
this affect population growth rate (when N
1,000 roaches)?
33NOT ALL GROWTH IS DENSITY DEPENDENT
- Factors Unrelated to Population Size
- Weather
- Pollution
Thrip population growth over a year
34THE TRUE SITUATION
- Most populations are probably regulated by a
MIXTURE of density-dependent and
density-independent factors
35TIME LAGS
- A change in environment does not result in
instantaneous change in pop size or growth rate - Pop. may have delayed response to events that
occur - Tendency to overshoot K and generate oscillations
36LIFE HISTORY TRAITS AGE STRUCTURE
- Age Structure of a Population is Important
- Individuals at diff. ages reproduce differently
- In humans, elderly and newborns dont reproduce
- Individuals may be more vulnerable to death at
diff. ages
37HUMAN AGE STRUCTURE
- Age Structure
- Developed nations have age distribution that
tends to - be even
- Developing nations have age distribution that is
bottom- heavy - Mostly young individuals
38More-Developed Countries
100
1998 data
95
90
85
2050 projections
80
75
70
65
60
55
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
0
20
20
40
40
60
60
(In millions)
Females
Males
39Less-Developed Countries
100
95
1998 data
90
85
2050 projections
80
75
70
65
60
55
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
0
100
100
200
200
300
300
(in millions)
Females
Males
40LIFE HISTORY TRAITS SURVIVORSHIP CURVES
- Type I
- High survivorship of young (parental care)
- Ex Mammals
- Type II
- Death rate is constant at all ages
- Ex Birds, lizards, small mammals
- Type III
- Indeterminate growth
- High mortality of young
- Many offspring typically produced, little if any
parental care - Ex Trees, frogs, plants, marine invertebrates
41LIFE HISTORY TRAITS SURVIVORSHIP CURVES
42Three General Types of Survivorship Curves
1000
High survivorship
Type l
100
Type ll
Low survivorship
Number of survivors (Nx)
Low survivorship
Steady survivorship
10
1
Type lll
High survivorship
0.1
Age
43LIFE HISTORY TRAITS FECUNDITY CURVES
- Type I
- Reproduction is low at start of life and towards
end - Ex Humans
- Type II
- Fecundity increases with age (size?)
- Ex Fish
- Type III
- Reproduction begins at certain age and continues
until death - Ex Insects
44LIFE HISTORY TRAITS LIFE TABLES
- Life Tables
- Tracks representative sample (cohort) through
time - Divides population into age classes
- Tracks number of offspring born within age
classes - m(x) female offspring produced per mother
- Assigns risk of mortality within each age class
- l(x) chance of survival from 0 ? x
45LIFE TABLES
l(x) survivorship m(x) fecundity
46LIFE TABLES
- l(x)
- Survivorship from age 0? x
- m(x)
- Average number of female babies born per female
age x - Sum l(x)m(x)
- Net Replacement Rate
- Average number of female babies born to a female
in her lifetime - Probability of living from age A ? age B
- l(x) for B/ l(x) for A
47LIFE TABLE PROBLEMS
- Use the Life Table (shown previously) to Answer
the - Following
- Each individual will replace themselves with how
many individuals? - Whats the probability of living from 1?2 years
old? - Whats the probability of living from 2?3 years
old?
48LIMITATIONS OF THE LIFE TABLE
- Some Species Develop Through Various Life
Stages - Animals may not spend equal time in each stage
- Ex Frogs and insects
49LIFE TABLES CONSERVATION
- Life Tables
- Summarize probability that an individual will
survive reproduce in any year over course of
its lifetime - Can be used to make population projections and
guide conservation programs
50POPULATION EXTINCTION
- In the Simplest Terms, Probability of Pop.
Extinction Depends On - Birth rates (b)
- Death rates (d)
- Immigration (I)
- Emigration (E)
- Number of individuals in population (N)
51POPULATION EXTINCTION
- Population Viability Analysis (PVA)
- Model that estimates likelihood that a pop. will
avoid extinction for a given time period - I E taken into account
- Also models stochastic events that threaten
population
52POPULATION EXTINCTION
- Population Viability Analysis (PVA)
- Populations are considered viable if they have
- 95 probability of surviving for at least 100
years - Currently used by natural resource managers
- Ex Golden Lion Tamarins
53Population Viability Analysis
80
High immigration
60
Population size
40
Low immigration
20
No immigration
0
10
20
50
30
40
60
90
100
0
80
70
Years