Title: Population Distribution and Abundance
1Population Distribution and Abundance
2Outline
- Distribution Limits
- Distribution Patterns
- Organism Size and Population Density
- Commonness and Rarity
3Introduction
- Ecologists usually define a population as a group
of individuals of a single species inhabiting a
specific area. - Characterized by the number of individuals and
their density. - Additional characteristics of a population
include age distributions, growth rates,
distribution, and abundance.
4Distribution Limits
- Physical environment limits geographic
distribution of a species. - Organisms can only compensate so much for
environmental variation.
5Kangaroo Distributions and Climate
- Caughley found a close relationship between
climate and distribution of the three largest
kangaroos in Australia. - Macropus giganteus - Eastern Grey
- Eastern 1/3 of continent.
- Macropus fuliginosus - Western Grey
- Southern and western regions.
- Macropus rufus - Red
- Arid / semiarid interior.
6Kangaroo Distributions and Climate
7Kangaroo Distributions and Climate
- Limited distributions may not be directly
determined by climate. - Climate often influences species distributions
via - Food production
- Water supply
- Habitat
- Incidence of parasites, pathogens and competitors.
8Tiger Beetle of Cold Climates
- Tiger Beetle (Cicindela longilabris) lives at
higher latitudes and elevations than most other
species in NA. - Schultz et. al. found metabolic rates of C.
longilabris are higher and preferred temperatures
lower than most other species. - Supports generalization that the physical
environment limits species distributions.
9Tiger Beetle of Cold Climates
10Distributions of Plants along a
Moisture-Temperature Gradient
- Encelia species distributions correspond to
variations in temperature and precipitation.
11Distributions of Barnacles along an Intertidal
Exposure Gradient
- Organisms living in an intertidal zone have
evolved to different degrees of resistance to
drying. - Barnacles show distinctive patterns of zonation
within intertidal zone. - Connell found Chthamalus stellatus restricted to
upper levels while Balanus balanoides is limited
to middle and lower levels.
12Distributions of Barnacles along an Intertidal
Gradient
- Balanus appears to be more vulnerable to
desiccation, excluding it from the upper
intertidal zone. - Chthamalus adults appear to be excluded from
lower areas by competition with Balanus.
13Distributions of Barnacles along an Intertidal
Gradient
14Distribution of Individuals on Small Scales
- Random Equal chance of being anywhere.
- Uniform distribution of resources.
- Regular Uniformly spaced.
- Exclusive use of areas.
- Individuals avoid one another.
- Clumped Unequal chance of being anywhere.
- Mutual attraction between individuals.
- Patchy resource distribution.
15Distribution of Individuals on Small Scales
16Distribution of Tropical Bee Colonies
- Hubbell and Johnson predicted aggressive bee
colonies would show regular distributions while
non-aggressive species would show random or
clumped distributions. - As predicted, four species with regular
distributions were highly aggressive. - Fifth was non-aggressive and randomly
distributed. - Prospective nest sites marked with pheromones.
17Distributions of Desert Shrubs
- Traditional theory suggests desert shrubs are
regularly spaced due to competition. - Phillips and MacMahon found distribution of
desert shrubs changes from clumped to regular
patterns as they grow. - Young shrubs clumped for (3) reasons
- Seeds germinate at safe sites
- Seeds not dispersed from parent areas
- Asexual reproduction
18Distributions of Desert Shrubs
- Phillips and MacMahon proposed as plants grow,
some individuals in clumps die, reducing
clumping. - Competition among remaining plants produces
higher mortality. - Eventually creates regular distributions.
- Brisson and Reynolds found competitive
interactions with neighboring shrubs appear to
influence distribution of creosote roots, Larrea
tridentata.
19Distributions of Individuals on Large Scales
- Bird Populations Across North America
- Root found at continental scale, bird populations
showed clumped distributions in Christmas Bird
Counts. - Clumped patterns occur in species with widespread
distributions. - Brown found a relatively small proportion of
study sites yielded most of records for each bird
species in Breeding Bird Survey.
20Plant Abundance along Moisture Gradients
- Whittaker examined distributions of woody plants
along moisture gradients in several North
American mountain ranges. - Documented moisture gradient from moist canyon
bottoms up to the dry southwest-facing slopes. - Tree species showed a highly clumped distribution
along moisture gradients, with densities
decreasing substantially toward the edges of
their distribution.
21Plant Abundance Along Moisture Gradients
22Organism Size and Population Density
- In general, population density declines with
increasing organism size. - Damuth found the population density of
herbivorous mammals decreased with increased body
size. - Peters and Wassenberg found aquatic invertebrates
tend to have higher population densities than
terrestrial invertebrates of similar size. - Mammals tend to have higher population densities
than birds of similar size.
23Organism Size and Population Density
24Plant Size and Population Density
- Plant population density decreases with
increasing plant size. - Underlying details are very different.
- Tree seedlings can live at very high densities,
but as the trees grow, density declines
progressively until mature trees are at low
densities.
25Commonness and Rarity
- Rabinowitz devised commonness classification
based on (3) factors - Geographic Range of Species
- Habitat Tolerance
- Local Population Size
- Populations that are least threatened by
extinction, have extensive geographic ranges,
broad habitat tolerances, and some large local
populations. - All seven other combinations create some kind of
rarity.
26Rarity
- Rarity I
- Extensive Range, Broad Habitat Tolerance, Small
Local Populations - Peregrine Falcon
- Rarity II
- Extensive Rage, Large Populations, Narrow Habitat
Tolerance - Passenger Pigeon
27Rarity
- Rarity III
- Restricted Range, Narrow Habitat Tolerance, Small
Populations - California Condor
28Review
- Distribution Limits
- Distribution Patterns
- Organism Size and Population Density
- Commonness and Rarity
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