Title: Population Ecology
1Population Ecology
G. Tyler Millers Living in the Environment 14th
Edition Chapter 9 Pages 163-174
2Key Concepts
- Factors affecting population size
- Species reproductive patterns
- Species survivorship patterns
- Conservation biology and human impacts on
ecosystems
3CASE STUDY Sea Otters
- live in kelp forests
- eat sea urchins
- hunted in 1900s
- 1977 declared endangered
- Increased from 300 to 2800
- keystone species
- ? protect kelp forest
OMG
49-1 Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
OBJ 9.1
- Population dynamics
- study of how populations change in size, density,
and age distribution - populations respond to their environment
- change according to distribution
5Factors Governing Changes in Population Size
OBJ 9.2
- Four variable
- births, deaths, immigration and emigration
- Population Change (births immigration)
(deaths emigration)
6Age Structure Stages
- PREREPRODUCTIVE AGE
- - Not mature enough to reproduce
- REPRODUCTIVE AGE
- - Capable of reproducing
- POSTREPRODUCTIVE AGE
- - too old to reproduce
7LIMITING FACTOR
OBJ 9.3
DEFINITION anything that tends to make it more
difficult for a species to live and grow, or
reproduce in its environment
ABIOTIC - temperature - water -
climate/weather - soils (mineral component)
BIOTIC - competition interspecific and
intraspecific - predation/parasitism -
amensalism - mutualism
8LIMITS TO POPULATION GROWTH Resources
Competition
Biotic potential capacity for growth Intrinsic
rate of increase (r) rate at which a population
would grow if it had unlimited resources Environme
ntal resistance all factors that act to limit
the growth of a population Carrying Capacity (K)
maximum of individuals of a given species that
can be sustained indefinitely in a given space
(area or volume)
Fig. 9-3 p. 166
9Exponential and Logistic Growth
OBJ 9.4
LOGISTIC GROWTH - Rapid exp. growth followed by
steady dec. in pop. Growth w/time until pop. Size
levels off
- EXPONENTIAL GROWTH
- Population w/few resource limitations grows at a
fixed rate
10OBJ 9.5
11Population Density Effects
OBJ 9.6
- Density-independent controls
- - floods, hurricanes, unseasonable weather,
fire, habitat destruction, pesticide spraying,
pollution - - EX Severe freeze in spring can kill plant
pop. regardless of density
- Density-dependent controls
- - competition for resources, predation,
parasitism, infectious diseases - - EX Bubonic plague swept through European
cities in 14th century
12Natural Population Curves
OBJ 9.7
Fig. 9-7 p. 168
13- STABLE
- pop. Size fluctuates above or below its carrying
capacity - Stable population size
- EX undisturbed tropical rain forests
- IRRUPTIVE
- pop. Growth occasionally explodes to a high peak
then crashes to stable low level - EX Algae, insects
- CYCLIC
- Fluctuations occur in cycles over a regular time
period - EX Lynx snowshoe hare
- IRREGULAR
- No recurring pattern in changes of population
size
14The Role of Predation in Controlling Population
Size
OBJ 9.8
- Bottom-up control
- - the hare pop. may cause changes in lynx pop.
- Top-down control
- - lynx preying on hares periodically reduce the
hare pop.
Fig. 9-8 p. 168
15How do Species Reproduce
- ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION
- all offspring are exact genetic copies of a
single parent - Common in single celled species (bacteria)
- Each cell divides to produce 2 identical cells
- SEXUAL REPRODUCTION
- Organisms produce offspring by combining sex
cells or gametes from both parents - Produces offspring with combination of genetic
traits from each parent - Provides greater genetic diversity in offspring
- DISADVANTAGES
- Males do not give birth
- Increased chance of genetic errors and defects
- Courtship mating rituals consume time energy
and transmit diseases
16Reproductive Patterns and Survival
OBJ 9.10
- r-selected species vs. K-selected species
Fig. 9-10 p. 170
17Survivorship Curves
OBJ 9.11
- Shows the of members in a pop. Surviving at
different ages
- LATE LOSS
- High survivorship to certain age then high
mortality - EX elephants, rhinos, humans
- CONSTANT LOSS
- Fairly constant death rate at all ages
- EX songbirds
- EARLY LOSS
- Survivorship is low early in life
- EX annual plants, bony fish sp.
Fig. 9-11 p. 171
18Human Impacts on Ecosystems
- Habitat degradation and fragmentation
- Introduction of non-native species
- Overharvesting renewable resources
- Interference with ecological systems
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