Title: Chapter 10 Population Dynamics
1Chapter 10 Population Dynamics
2Estimating Patterns of Survival
- Three main ways of estimating patterns of
survival within a population - Identify a large number of individuals that are
born about the same time (cohort) and keep
records of them from birth to death ---gt cohort
life table - Record the age at death of a large number of
individuals ---gt static life table - Determine patterns of survival for the population
from the age distribution
3Static Life Tables and Survivorship Curves
Example Survival pattern of Dall sheep
Plotting number of survivors against age produces
a survivorship curve
4Types of Survivorship Curves
- Type I Survivorship Curve
- A pattern in which most of the individuals of
the population survive to maturity - Or, most individuals of the population do not
die until they reach some genetically programmed
uniform age
5Types of Survivorship Curves cont.
- Type II Survivorship Curve
- Relatively constant death rates with age
- Equal probability that an individual will die at
any particular age
6Types of Survivorship Curves cont.
- Type III Survivorship Curve
- A pattern in which their is an extremely steep
juvenile mortality and a relatively high
survivorship afterward - Most offspring die before they reach
reproductive age
7Age Distribution
- Age distribution can tell you a lot about a
population periods of successful reproduction
periods of high and low survival whether older
individuals are being replaced whether a
population is growing, declining, etc.
8Age Distribution and Stable Populations
9Age Distribution and Declining Populations
10A Dynamic Population in a Variable Climate
11Rates of Population Change Combining a Cohort
Life Table with a Fecundity Schedule
- Fecundity schedule - the tabulation of birth
rates (the number of young born per female per
unit time) for females of different ages in a
population - By combining the information in a fecundity
schedule with data from a life table, we can
estimate several important characteristics of a
population
12Example A Population with Discrete Generations
- nx, the number of individuals in the population
surviving to each age interval - lx, survivorship, the proportion of the
population surviving to each age x - mx,average number of progeny produced by each
individual in each age interval - lx mx, the product of l and m
- Net reproductive rate, R0
- R0 ?lx mx
- To calculate the number of progeny produced by a
population in a given time interval, multiply R0
by the initial number of individuals in the
population.
Example 2.4177 x 996 plants 2408
13Geometric Rate of Increase
- The ratio of population increase at two points in
time ? Nt1 - n
- Where, Nt1 is the size of the population at a
later time, and Nt is the size of the population
at an earlier time
Example ? 2408 2.4177 996
14More on net reproductive rate
- R0 is an indication of the expected number of
female offspring which a newly born female will
produce during her life span - Its an indication of whether a female replaces
herself in the population - R lt 1, the population will decline
- R 1, the population will remain constant
- R gt 1, population will increase (more offspring
produced than needed to replace the female)
15Mean Generation Time (T)
T ? (x lx mx / Ro where x is
age Example from the common mud turtle These
turtles have an average generation time of 10.6
years 6.4/0.601 10.6
16per capita rate of increase (r)
r ln Ro / T Turtle example r ln (0.601)
/ 10.6 r -0.05