Title: Population fluctuations
1Population fluctuations
- Topics for this class
- Population fluctuations in nature can result from
changing environment, i.e., extrinsic
environmental factors - Alternatively, population fluctuations can result
from intrinsic demographic factors, such as high
growth rate coupled with time delay allowing
population to exceed carrying capacity - Under extreme conditions populations could in
theory behave chaotically, even in a constant
environment! - Both time delays and high population growth rate
tend to destabilize populations, leading to
greater fluctuations
2Population growth rate depends on ecological
conditions--e.g., two grain beetle species (imp
later, competition!)
3Population biology helps ecologists understand
what factors stabilize or destabilize populations
- Density-dependent population growth tends to
stabilize population size - We have just learned that logistic growth leads
to dynamically stable populations - These always approach an asymptote (K carrying
capacity) as long as N gt 0 - If we look at populations in nature, however,
they are rarely constant Dynamic (fluctuating)
populations are the norm - We can ask, then, what factors destabilize
populations?
4A major cause of population fluctuations is
changing environments!
- Environments are rarely stable, especially at
higher latitudes - Changes in populations can result from changes in
food, temperatures, light levels, chemistry, and
a variety of other factors that influence birth
and death rates - Populations can fluctuate due to spatially
heterogeneous environments, coupled with
emigration and immigration - Ecologists refer to fluctuations brought about by
changes in the external environment as extrinsic
factors (they are outside a population, and
necessitate demographic adjustments)
5Phytoplankton in lake Erie exhibit huge
fluctuations due to changing extrinsic factors,
e.g., temperature, light, food
6Intrinsic factors can also cause population
fluctuations
- Sir Robert May was the first ecologist to
demonstrate, with models, how intrinsic
population factors can cause dramatic
fluctuations - May was trained in Australia as a physicist, with
strong mathematical skills - He became intrigued with biological problems at
least partly due to the theoretical work of
Robert MacArthur, who was at Princeton University - Among other things, May showed that very simple
mathematical models of discrete time,
density-dependent population growth could lead to
an extraordinary array of population
dynamics--including limit cycles and chaos!
7Mays model of population dynamics
- May used a difference equation analog of the
logistic model - N(t1) N(t)e(r1-Nt/K)
- e, r , K are constants, same as in prior models
- This equation is a discrete-time model,
calculating a new population based on the
population one time unit ago (e.g., one year) - Notice also that when Nt is near zero brackets,
right hand side of equation approaches N(t)er,
i.e., exponential growth! - Conversely, when Nt approaches K, right hand side
of equation approaches N(t)e0, N(t) i.e., the
population ceases to grow, as in the logistic
model
8Behavior of Mays model easy to study
- Smooth approach to equilibrium (graph of N as a
function of t), if r lt 1 - Initial overshoot of K, damped oscillations
around K, if r between roughly 1 and 2 - Stable limit cycles (continual oscillations, with
fixed periodicities) if r gt 2 - Chaos! I.e., one cannot predict population into
future, because of bizarre behavior, for r gtgt 2 - Do any population behave in nature according to
these equations? - Some insects with high growth rates show limit
cycles, but none so far show chaotic growth
9Why does discrete-time (difference) equation lead
to such fluctuations?
- One explanation is built-in (intrinsic)
time-delay, implicit in difference equation - Population can exceed K before negative feedback
occurs that tends to bring it back towards K - Effect of time delay as a destabilizing factor
can be shown with models - dNt/dt rNt(K - Nt-t)/K
- Here t is the time delay of the
density-dependence - This can be modeled easily
N(t1) N(t) rN(t)(K - Nt-t)/K
10Nicholsons lab study demonstrates destabilizing
effect of time-delay
- Classic lab experiment (1958) done with sheep
blowflies (Lucilia cuprina) - Time-delay treatment
- Larvae provided 50 g liver to feed on per day
- Adults provided unlimited food
- Effect was that density-dependence experienced
only by larvae When lots of adults present, they
laid many eggs resulting in so many larvae that
they all failed to pupate or produce
adults--gtpopulation crash - Elimination of time-delay by density-dependent
adults - Identical to prior experiment, except that adults
food-limited (1 g liver per day)--gtlimited egg
production
11Blowflies growing with time delay Green line
represents number of adult flies in population
cage vertical black lines are number of adults
that eventually emerged from eggs laid on days
indicated by the lines
12Blowflies grown without time-delay Adults
food-limited (right hand side of top graph) such
thaf density-dependence occurs on adults, not on
larvae as in prior experiment
13Whats the time delay in Nicholsons blowflies?
- Time delay was a period of about one week
- This is equivalent to the time it takes for eggs
to hatch and larvae to develop to the size that
they competed for the limited (50 g) food - The larvae were way too abundant for the food
(density-dependence kicked in) because of the
huge numbers of eggs and larvae produced by the
adults - Adults were able to produce huge numbers of eggs
in the first experiment because adult food was
unlimited in abundance, providing protein for egg
production - Insects experienced scramble competition, in
which the larvae eventually had so little food
per individual that none could survive to pupation
14Conclusions
- Population fluctuations the norm in nature
- In many cases populations vary in response to
extrinsic environmental factors such as changing
food, temperatures, light, chemicals, etc., that
affect reproduction and survival - In other cases, however, intrinsic dynamics
including time-delays can cause fluctuations,
including limit cycles and chaos--even though the
environment is constant (e.g., r, K do not
change!) - Nicholsons sheep blowfly experiments indicate
that a time-delay in the density-dependent
feedback was what likely caused the population
fluctuations (instability) in his laboratory
system