Title: Population Ecology
1Population Ecology
- Asim Zia
- Introduction to Environmental Issues
- EnvS 001, Spring 2007
- Department of Environmental Studies
- San Jose State University
2Chapter 8 Overview Questions
- What are the major characteristics of
populations? - How do populations respond to changes in
environmental conditions? - How do species differ in their reproductive
patterns?
3Core Case Study Southern Sea Otters Are They
Back from the Brink of Extinction?
- They were over-hunted to the brink of extinction
by the early 1900s and are now making a
comeback.
Figure 8-1
4Core Case Study Southern Sea Otters Are They
Back from the Brink of Extinction?
- Sea otters are an important keystone species for
sea urchins and other kelp-eating organisms.
Figure 8-1
5POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY
- Most populations live in clumps although other
patterns occur based on resource distribution.
Figure 8-2
6Changes in Population Size Entrances and Exits
- Populations increase through births and
immigration - Populations decrease through deaths and
emigration
7Age Structure Young Populations Can Grow Fast
- How fast a population grows or declines depends
on its age structure. - Prereproductive age not mature enough to
reproduce. - Reproductive age those capable of reproduction.
- Postreproductive age those too old to reproduce.
8Limits on Population Growth Biotic Potential
vs. Environmental Resistance
- No population can increase its size indefinitely.
- The intrinsic rate of increase (r) is the rate at
which a population would grow if it had unlimited
resources. - Carrying capacity (K) the maximum population of
a given species that a particular habitat can
sustain indefinitely without degrading the
habitat.
9Exponential and Logistic Population Growth
J-Curves and S-Curves
- Populations grow rapidly with ample resources,
but as resources become limited, its growth rate
slows and levels off.
Figure 8-4
10Exponential and Logistic Population Growth
J-Curves and S-Curves
- As a population levels off, it often fluctuates
slightly above and below the carrying capacity.
Figure 8-4
11Exceeding Carrying Capacity Move, Switch Habits,
or Decline in Size
- Members of populations which exceed their
resources will die unless they adapt or move to
an area with more resources.
Figure 8-6
12How Would You Vote?
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Living in the Environment. - Can we continue to expand the earth's carrying
capacity for humans? - a. No. Unless humans voluntarily control their
population and conserve resources, nature will do
it for us. - b. Yes. New technologies and strategies will
allow us to further delay exceeding the earth's
carrying capacity.
13Population Density and Population Change Effects
of Crowding
- Population density the number of individuals in
a population found in a particular area or
volume. - A populations density can affect how rapidly it
can grow or decline. - e.g. biotic factors like disease
- Some population control factors are not affected
by population density. - e.g. abiotic factors like weather
14Types of Population Change Curves in Nature
- Population sizes may stay the same, increase,
decrease, vary in regular cycles, or change
erratically. - Stable fluctuates slightly above and below
carrying capacity. - Irruptive populations explode and then crash to
a more stable level. - Cyclic populations fluctuate and regular cyclic
or boom-and-bust cycles. - Irregular erratic changes possibly due to chaos
or drastic change.
15Types of Population Change Curves in Nature
- Population sizes often vary in regular cycles
when the predator and prey populations are
controlled by the scarcity of resources.
Figure 8-7
16Case Study Exploding White-Tailed Deer
Populations in the United States
- Since the 1930s the white-tailed deer population
has exploded in the United States. - Nearly extinct prior to their protection in
1920s. - Today 25-30 million white-tailed deer in U.S.
pose human interaction problems. - Deer-vehicle collisions (1.5 million per year).
- Transmit disease (Lyme disease in deer ticks).
17REPRODUCTIVE PATTERNS
- Some species reproduce without having sex
(asexual). - Offspring are exact genetic copies (clones).
- Others reproduce by having sex (sexual).
- Genetic material is mixture of two individuals.
- Disadvantages males do not give birth, increase
chance of genetic errors and defects, courtship
and mating rituals can be costly. - Major advantages genetic diversity, offspring
protection.
18Sexual Reproduction Courtship
- Courtship rituals consume time and energy, can
transmit disease, and can inflict injury on males
of some species as they compete for sexual
partners.
Figure 8-8
19Reproductive PatternsOpportunists and
Competitors
- Large number of smaller offspring with little
parental care (r-selected species). - Fewer, larger offspring with higher invested
parental care (K-selected species).
Figure 8-9
20Reproductive Patterns
- r-selected species tend to be opportunists while
K-selected species tend to be competitors.
Figure 8-10
21Survivorship Curves Short to Long Lives
- The way to represent the age structure of a
population is with a survivorship curve. - Late loss population live to an old age.
- Constant loss population die at all ages.
- Most members of early loss population, die at
young ages.
22Survivorship Curves Short to Long Lives
- The populations of different species vary in how
long individual members typically live.
Figure 8-11