Populations Section #1: How Populations Change in Size.

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Populations Section #1: How Populations Change in Size

Transcript of Populations Section #1: How Populations Change in Size.

Page 1: Populations Section #1: How Populations Change in Size.

Populations

Section #1:How Populations Change in

Size

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Population:

•all the members of a species living in the same place at the same time

•a reproductive group – breed with each other

•also deals with the number of individuals

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Population

described in terms of:•size – how many•density – the # of per unit area

or volume•dispersion – arrangement of

individuals within a given space

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How Does a Population Grow?

growth rate = births – deaths

growth rate = change in the size of a population over a given period of time

•can be positive, negative or zero

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How Fast Can a Population Grow?

Biotic Potential – the fastest rate at which a population can grow

Reproductive Potential – the maximum # of offspring that each member of a population can produce

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Reproductive Potential

increases when individuals:•produce more offspring at a

time•reproduce more often•reproduce earlier in life

(generation time – the time it takes to reach sexual maturity)

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Exponential Growth

•a large # of individuals is added to the population in each succeeding time period

•population has plenty of food, space, no competition, little disease

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What Limits Growth?

•natural conditions that are neither ideal or constant

•lack of resources•environmental change•disease

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Carrying Capacity

•the maximum population that the ecosystem can support indefinitely

•capacity can change over time•populations may increase beyond this #, but cannot stay

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Carrying Capacity Example

•Australia originally did not have rabbits until they were introduced in 1859

•no competition, no predators, & plenty of food led to rapid growth

•population eventually crashed because of disease & starvation

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Resource Limits

•plant growth is limited by water supplies, sunlight, & mineral nutrients

•a species reaches its carrying capacity when it consumes a particular natural resource at the same rate at which the ecosystem produces the resource

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Competition

•members of the same population compete for the same resources as the carrying capacity nears

•can also compete for social dominance, territory, mates, etc.

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Density Dependent or Independent

•cause of death is density dependent when populations are crowded (limited resources, predation, disease)

•ex. = disease carrying beetle can spread quickly through dense pine forests

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Density Dependent or Independent

•cause of death is density independent when a certain # of individuals die regardless of density

•ex. = severs weather, flooding, storms, etc. that affect all populations in that area equally

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