Title: Population fluctuations and cycles
1Population fluctuations and cycles
- Populations tend to fluctuate through time
- Localized populations fluctuate more than entire
populations
2What could be causing these fluctuations?
3Timing of density measurement affects population
size estimate and degree of fluctuation detected
Northern Bobwhite populations
4Resilience
- Rate at which population springs back to
equilibrium after jumping above or dipping below
it due to a disturbance - Body size and lifespan effects
- Smaller, shorter-lived species show wider swings
in population size. Why? - Smaller, shorter-lived animals show greater
resilience. Why?
5Oscillating populations appear to have regular
cycles
6Key hypotheses for why populations oscillate
- Time lags
- Predator-prey relationships
- Links to environmental cycles
- Example El Niño and kelp forests
- Life cycles of parasites
- Example Malaria-carrying mosquitos
- Changes in gene frequencies
- Behavior...
7Snowshoe hare cycles Evidence of decline is
evident just prior to peak
- High winter weight loss
- Decreased juvenile growth rate
- Decreased juvenile overwinter survival
8What makes a population vulnerable to extinction?
- Low density
- Difficult to find mates (Queen conchs in Florida)
- Vulnerable to hybridization (less choosy)
- Isolation
- Restricted gene flow/cut off from metapopulation
- Why a problem?
- Small size
- Could lose a higher proportion of individuals in
a disaster - Smaller subset of genotypes additional genetic
drift
9Mass extinctions
- In which geologic period, and approximately how
many millions of year ago, did the largest
extinction occur? - Permian (250 mya)
- When did the dinosaur extinction occur?
- Cretaceous (60 mya)
- Was this extinction restricted to dinosaurs or to
land?
10Process of extinction
- Role of localized extinctions
- Habitat destruction or other cause ?
- Marginalization of individuals (? survival/
reproduction) - Fragmentation of habitat and populations ?
- Continuous populations ? metapopulations
- Reduction of gene flow
- Inbreeding and genetic drift ?
- Local population wiped out by disaster ?
- Many localized extinctions ? Species itself is
threatened or eliminated
11Deterministic causes of extinction
- Occurs due to force or change with continued
effects - No escape for population or species over the long
term - Asteroid theory of Cretaceous extinction
species unable to escape climate change - Overhunting of passenger pigeon and great auk
12Great auk What led to its extinction?
- Initial distribution widespread across the North
Atlantic - Localized killing for food and bait ?
fragmentation - For-profit killing for fat and feathers ?
extinction of local populations - When rare, high-paid trade in skin and eggs
- Last pair and one egg taken in Iceland, 1844
- Image courtesy of the Canadian Museum of Nature
13Stochastic causes of extinction
- Examples?
- How might determinstic and stochastic causes work
together to cause extinction - Heath hen example (also in text)