Title: Chapter 9: Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology
1Chapter 9 Population Dynamics, Carrying
Capacity, and Conservation Biology
2Characteristics of Population
- Size (number of individuals)
- Density (number of individuals in a certain
space) - Dispersion (spatial pattern such as clumping,
uniform, or random) - Age Distribution (proportion of individuals of
each age in a population)
3Population Dynamics Occur in Response To
- Environmental Stress
- Changes in Environmental Conditions
4Population Change
- Population Change (births immigration) -
(deaths emigration) - These variables depend on changes in resource
availability or other environmental change.
5What Limits Population Growth?
- Biotic Potential - a populations capacity for
growth - Intrinsic Rate of Increase (r) - the rate at
which a population would grow if it had unlimited
resources. - Those that have a high intrinsic rate
- Reproduce early in life
- Have short generation times
- Can reproduce many times
- Have many offspring each time they reproduce
- Environmental Resistance - includes all of the
factors acting together to limit the growth if it
had unlimited resources.
6What is Carrying Capacity?
- The population species in a given place and time
is determined by its biotic potential and
enviornmental resistance. - Carrying Capacity - the number of individuals of
a given species that can be sustained
indefinitely in a given space (area or volume) - Minimum Viable Population (MVP)
- Individuals need to find mates without
interbreeding - Provides opportunities for adaptation to new
environmental conditions
7Exponential Population Growth
- Occurs when a population has few if any resource
limitations - Starts out slowly and then proceeds faster and
faster as the population increases - double time! - Yields a J-shaped curve
8Logisitic Population Growth
- Involves exponential population growth, but when
exposed to environmental resistance and/or the
carrying capacity, it levels off - Yields a S-shaped curve
9Exceeding the Carrying Capacity
- Overshoots or exceeds the carrying capacity of
the environment - Caused by a reproductive time lag - the period
needed for the birth rate to fall and the death
rate to rise in response to resource
overconsumption - Dieback or crash unless excess individuals move
or switch to new resources
10Carrying Capacity Can Be Affected By...
- Competition within and between species
- Immigration and Emigration
- Nature and human-caused events
- Seasonal fluctuations in the supply of food,
water, hiding places, and nesting sites - Technology, social and cultural changes
11Density - Independent Population Controls
- Affect a population size regardless of its
density - Floods
- Fires
- Hurricanes
- Unseasonable Weather
- Habitat Destruction
- Pesticide Spraying
12Density - Dependent Population Controls
- Have a greater effect as the populations density
increases - Competition for resources
- Predation
- Parasitism
- Disease
13Population Curves In Nature
- Stable - a species who population size fluctuates
slightly above and below its carrying capacity - Irruptive - species who have normally stable
populations that may occasionally explode or
irrupt to a high peak and then crash to a more
stable lower level - Explosions caused by favorable weather, more
food, fewer predators - Irregular - no recurring pattern
- Cyclic - cycles of population size over a regular
time period - Lemmings - populations rise and fall every 3 - 4
years
14Top-Down Control Hypothesis
- The top-predator controls the population
- Lynx preying on hares reduce their population
- The shortage of hares reduces the lynx population
- The hare population builds up again
- The lynx population builds up again due to the
increased hares - Hares have been shown to have this cycle when
there arent any lynx around - Wolves controlling deer and moose populations
- Large predator fish controlling other fish
populations
15Bottom-Up Control Hypothesis
- Controlled by the bottom of the food web
- Hares consume too many plants
- Create a decrease in the quality and quantity of
their food supply - Once the hare population crashes, the plants
recover, and then the hare population rises again
16Reproductive Patterns and Survival
- Asexual Reproduction
- Sexual Reproduction
- Ecological Costs and Risks
- Females need to produce twice as many to maintain
the same number of young as asexually reproducing
organisms - Genetic errors and defects
- Mating entails cost, time, injury, delay
- Why use it?
- More genetic diversity
- Males can help the females
17R-Selected Species
- Have a capacity for a high intrinsic rate of
increase (r) - Reproduce early
- Most energy goes into reproduction
- Have many, small offspring
- Short generation times
- No parental care or protection
- Short lived lives
- Opportunists! --gt the reproduce and disperse
rapidly when conditions are favorable or when a
disturbance opens up - Bacteria, rodents, annual plants, insects
18K-Selected Species
- Tend to do little when in competitive situations
when their population size is nearing the
carrying capacity - Put little energy into reproduction
- Tend to reproduce late in life mature slowly
- Few offspring with long generation times
- Put most of their energy into nurturing and
protecting their young - Develop inside their mothers
- Cared for by one or both parents
- Follow a logistic growth curve
- Large mammals, birds of prey, large and
long-lived plants - Prone to extinction
- Thrive best in constant ecosystem
19Survivorship Curves
- Shows the number of survivors of each age group
for a particular species - Late Loss Curves - typical for K-selected
species few young and care for them until
reproductive age - Early Loss Curves - typical for R-selected
species have many offspring, high rate of
juvenile mortality, and high survivorship once
the surviving young reach a certain age and size - Constant Loss Curves - typical for intermediate
reproductive patterns constant rate of mortality
in all age classes - Life Table - shows the number of individuals at
each age from a survivor ship curve - Projected life expectancy and probability of
death for each age
20Conservation Biology
- A multi-disciplinary science that uses the best
available science to take action to preserve
species and ecosystems - Species in extinction?
- Status of functioning ecosystems and what
ecosystem services are we in danger or losing? - What measures can be taken to sustain ecosystem
functions and populations of wild species? - Bioinformatics
21Modifying Ecosystems
- Fragmented and degraded habitat
- Simplified natural ecosystems
- Using, wasting, destroying NPP
- Strengthing some pest species
- Eliminate some predators
- Deliberately or accidentally introducing new or
nonnative species - Overharvesting renewable resources
- Interfering with the normal chemical cycling and
energy flow
22Challenges
- Maintain a balance between simplified,
human-altered ecosystems and more complex natural
ecosystems - Slow down the rates at which we are altering
nature for our purpose
23How can we learn from nature about living more
sustainably?
- Learn about the process and adaptation by which
nature sustains itself - Lives are dependent on the sun and the earth
- Everything is connected to everything else
- We can never do merely one thing
- We should limit the damage we cause
- We should use care, restraint, humility, and
cooperation with nature