POPULATION GROWTH & MEASUREMENT

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POPULATION GROWTH & MEASUREMENT AP Environmental Science Chapter 6

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POPULATION GROWTH & MEASUREMENT. AP Environmental Science Chapter 6. WHAT IS A POPULATION?. A group of interbreeding individuals within a geographical location. POPULATION SIZE is determined by: #of births (based on fertility rates) # of deaths # of indiv that - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: POPULATION GROWTH & MEASUREMENT

POPULATION GROWTH & MEASUREMENT

AP Environmental ScienceChapter 6

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WHAT IS A POPULATION?

A group of interbreeding individuals within a geographical location.

POPULATION SIZE is determined by:

a. #of births (based on fertility rates)

b. # of deathsc. # of indiv that enter or leave the

population

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Population Graphs measure status of populations

J-curve or Exponential Growth Curve

S-Curve or Logistics Curve

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POPULATION DENSITYDENSITY: number of

individuals per unit area or volume

Ex: Suppose there are 150 bullfrogs living in apond that covers an area 3 square km. What is the population

density?

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Population density

Population Density =

Number of Individuals (150 frogs) Unit Area (3 sq KM)

= 50 bullfrogs per square kilometer!

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Populations Dynamics

http://www.hippocampus.org/course_locator?course=AP%20Biology%20II&lesson=63&topic=1&width=600&height=454&topicTitle=Population%20Ecology:%20Overview&skinPath=http://www.hippocampus.org/hippocampus.skins/default

Population Modeling

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CARRYING CAPACITY

Max population that a habitat can support

(Level line)

DISEASE

DISAsTERS

=

PREDATORS

FOOD

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Carrying Capacity Factors

These limiting pressures keep a population in check such as carrying capacity:1. # of Predators2. Amount of Food & Water ResourcesDiseaseNatural DisastersReproductive ability

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Other factors – H I P P O can decrease in population!!

H=Habitat I= Invasive species P= Pollution P=Other interacting populations O=Overconsumption

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Exponential Increase (J-curve)

In a J-curve,the popul keepsgrowing quickly(exponentially

over time).

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What causes J-curve to occur?

Conditions:1. No enemies2. No competition.3. Plenty of food & water4. Low % of disease J-curve is usually a temporary

situation=Population crash.

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Exponential Growth Math Model

Rate of reproduction

Initial Population

Time

Change in N

Change in time

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dN/dt = rNTime (dt)

N(dN)

Rate (r)*

r x N Exponentially how does it look for a J-curve

T1 2 10 10x2 = 20 2x10

T2 20 10 10x20=200 2x10x10

T3 200 10 10x200=2,000 2x10x10x10

T3 2000 10 10x2,000=20,000 2x10x10x10x10

T4 20,000 10 10x20,000=200,000 2x10x10x10x10x10N=2 cockroaches (male and female)r= 2 cockroaches can produce 20 offspring in 3 months

a. The rate of growth (r) 20/2 adults or 10 per 1 adult.b. The growth rate (r) equals 10

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Figure 06_03

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Exponential Growth can Crash

When population can no longer sustain itself without food resources, pop decrease beneath the carrying capacity.

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Population Crash

Isle Royale, MichiganNational Park

Moose popquickly in 1991-1995.

Wolf pop due toParvovirus passed on from domesticated dogs visiting the National Park.

Moose population Due to tick infestation.

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S-curve (Logistics curve)

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S-curve or Logistics Population

1. Population at equilibrium.

2. S-curve may change (increase & decrease) slightly, but is constant near the carrying capacity.

3. May be considered “restricted growth”.

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Factors that keep populations within carrying capacity

Migration

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Logistics Curve Model

dN = rN 1-N dt K

dN = change of population over timedtN = PopulationK= Current Carrying Capacityr= rate of change or reproductive rate of a speciesd

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Logisitics/Carrying Capacity Connection

If the carrying capacity (K) = 100 wolvesIf the N = 100 wolves (wolves bred successfully to increase population)Look at the 1-N/K part: 1 - 100

100 1- 1 = 0

dN/dt = rN(0)=0!!!

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Logistics & CC (continued)

There is no change in dN/dt-no population growth!

What if N=50? Plug it into 1-N/K to see how it affects the reproductive rate for a population. 1-50/100 = 1-1/2 = 1/2rN or half of the maximum reproductive rate for the wolves.

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Logistics & CC (continued)

If N = 10…plug into 1-N/K(1- 10) = (1-.10) = .90 100dN = rN(.90) or dN is at a rate of dt dt

90% as fast as the max possible reproductive rate for the wolves!

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Lincoln Peterson Population Estimate Model

Estimating population size by random sampling an ecosystem.Focus on population density or animal abundance. Model: n1 = m2 OR N= n1 x n2 N n2 m2n1=#animal marked & released 1st time n2=# animals captured during 2nd sessionm2-# animals captured during 2nd session & are marked.

Est Population

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Population Measurement in Review

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Population Equilibrium

Equilibrium: the balance between births and deaths within a population

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Other Population Considerations

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Environmental Resistance

Factors/pressures that limit a population’s ability to increase (CC)

Density Dependent Density Independent

Parasites Temperature

Disease Moisture, light, pH salinity

Competitors Weather

Predators Natural Disasters

Human Intervention Lack of habitat/territory

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Population Dispersal Definition

Different patterns of how a species orpopulation will inhabit a certaingeographical location.

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Population Dispersal is determined by:

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POPULATION DISPERSAL

A. RANDOM: 1. Least Common2. Found anywhere in

envir.3. High mobility such

as wind blown Ex: Dandelions

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POP DISPERSAL

B. Uniform1. Rare Occurrence but does occur

in nature! (Hawks, wolves)

2. Can indicate human impact a. Plantations, orchards, etc.

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UNIFORM POPULATION DISP.

Orchards

Red-Tailed Hawk

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CLUMPED POP DISPERSAL

C. CLUMPED:1. Patchy, most

common2. Protection, avail of

natural resources, to survive

3. Ex: Allelopathy, fish, plants, trees, etc.

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Clumped Dispersal – Purple Loosestrife Patterns in US

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Reproductive Potential

…Is an organism’s ability to grow at the fastest rate.

(To replenish the species—innate!)

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REPRODUCTIVE

POTENTIAL COMPARISON

1. R-selectedHint: Rapid Reproa. Early reproductionb. Short life spanc. Hi mortalityd. Little/no parental caree. Large # of offspring

producedf. Inhabit lower trophic

levels (1st order consumers)

2. K-selected Hint: Longer Reproa. Late reproductionb. Long life spanc. Low mortalityd. High parental caree. Small # of offspring

produced

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REPRODUCTION TYPES

K-SELECTED TYPE

R-SELECTED TYPES

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Reproductive potential – “R”

Bacterium can produce 19 million descendants in a few days!!

Mosquitoes live 10-14 days laying eggs every 3 days.

Mosquito rafts have 200-300 eggs;. hatch in 48 hours

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Reproductive potential – “K”

Some species have higher reproductive potential!!

K-Potential Gestation Times:Human= 9 monthsElephants= 22 monthsOppossum = 12-13

days (marsupial)

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CRITICAL NUMBERS

Survival & recovery of population depends on a minimum population base—its critical number.

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Factors Affecting Critical Number

C1. IMMIGRATION: movement of indiv into an areaC2. EMIGRATION: movement of individuals which leave

an area. Plus

Environmental Resistance Factors

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Critical Numbers

If pop falls below critical number, breeding may fail and extinction could occur.

Threatened: species whose pops are declining rapidly

Endangered: near critical number and may become extinct.