Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A....

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Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations: Is scale important?”
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Transcript of Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A....

Page 1: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Upcoming Seminars:• EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102

– Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations: Is scale important?”

Page 2: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Outline1. Introduction to population ecology2. Spatial structure3. Plant interactions and density

dependence4. Age and size structure5. Plant demography6. Population growth models and

parameters7. Life tables8. Survivorship curves

Page 3: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Reading Assignments1. Textbook chapter 4 and 52. Radford et al. 2002. Austral Ecology

27:258-358.3. Supplemental (not required)

• Allcock and Hik 2004. Oecologia 138:231-241.

• Silvertown and Lovett-Doust 1993. Introduction to plant population biology. Blackwell Scientific Publications, London.

Page 4: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Population BiologyPopulation: collection of individuals of

the same species living in the same area

Population structure: spatial, age, size

Population biology tries to explain origin of structure types, how they interact, and how they change with time.

Page 5: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Spatial StructurePatterns of distribution: random,

dispersed, clumped.

Patterns affected by biological and abiotic interactions. Test for randomness mean:variance ratio, Poisson analysis

Page 6: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Spatial StructureWhy does pattern matter?

Page 7: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Spatial StructureWhy does pattern matter?

• Interpret causes of patterns• Stratification• Appropriate sampling regimes

(density, frequency, non-quadrat)• Affects interactions

Page 8: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Plant interactions• Space affects population biology in

two ways:– “neighborhood” – area of genetic or

ecological influence– Density – number of plants per unit area.

Affects resource competition.

• Density influences growth, survival, fitness.

Page 9: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Law of Constant YieldBiomass/unit area increases with density,

then levels off and becomes independent of density.

Y=wmN(1 + aN)-1

Y= Yieldwm=max potential biomass/plant

N=densityA=area necessary to achieve wm

Page 10: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Law of Constant Yield• At high density Y is constant and

proportional to wma-1 and w=Y/N.

• Plant size is inversely proportional to density : w=wm(1+aN)-1

• Generalization: to allow for changing curves at high density (some species DECLINE in yield) replace –1 exponent with “-b”

Page 11: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Competition-Density Effect

• w=wm(1+aN)-b describes variation in weight with density at a given moment in time.

• Parameters vary during growth and with environmental conditions.

• Competition also leads to reduction in N over time (self-thinning)

Page 12: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

“-3/2 power law”• Self-thinning: smaller individuals die,

reducing density as plant size and competition increases. Density dependent mortality.w=cN-k and log w = log c – k log N-k = slope of “self thinning line”

(boundary)log c = constant between 3.5 and 5

-k is usually –3/2

Page 13: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

• Dense populations reach boundary line before sparse ones

• Slope of w:N constant across very different plant groups

• Controversy about “law” but there is a geometrical explanation (Yoda 1963)

– Plant weight proportional to volume (L3), plant sits on area (L2).

– When plant occupies all available space, ratio of weight to area CANNOT exceed 3:2

Page 14: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Age and Size StructureSize distribution of a given age rarely

normal.Plants usually display highly skewed

frequency distribution ( L shaped curve)

Page 15: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Skewed size distribution• Two causes:

– Growth rate is normally distributed, and faster growing plants change normal size distribution to skewed.

– Larger plants suppress smaller ones (asymmetric competition).

– Self-thinning in even aged stand can return normal size/age distribution in time.

Page 16: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Age and Size Structure• Maturity affected by size• Size affected by environmental

conditions and intraspecific competition

• Age-based models of populations often not appropriate for plants…use stage (or size) based

Page 17: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Modular growth

• Plants have indeterminate growth• Plants grow by adding modules

(roots, stems, leaves, clones)• Genet = one genetic individual (e.g.

aspen grove)• Ramet = clonally produced part of a

plant (may be essentially independent)

Page 18: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

DemographyStudy of changes in population size and

structure over time.

Nt+1=Nt + B – D + I – E

Nt+1/Nt = Finite rate of increase = λ

when λ = 1 population is stableWhen λ < 1 population is shrinkingWhen λ> 1 population is growing

Page 19: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Modeling populations: unrestricted growth

• Compare population at time t to population at time t+1 (difference equation)

Nt+1=RNt+Nt or Nt+1=λNt

λ=R+1 and R=geometric rate of increase

• For arbitrary time step: NT=N0λT

• For instantaneous growth (continuous time; differential equation)

dN/dt=rN(t) and N(T)/N(0)=erT

So N(T)=N(0)erT

Page 20: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Modeling populations: unrestricted growth

N

Time

Page 21: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Unrestricted growthWhat sorts of populations exhibit exponential

or geometric growth?1. Unrestricted resources2. No competition or other limitations

Page 22: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Unrestricted growthWhat sorts of populations exhibit exponential

or geometric growth?1. Unrestricted resources2. No competition or other limitations

Invasive species, expanding populationsExponential decline: constant mortality rate > birth

rate

Page 23: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Density dependent growth• Biological factors interact to produce a

negative feedback between N and R.• Examples:

– Resources decrease (are used up)– Available space is filled– Interference (agression etc) may increase– More efficient predation as prey density

increases– Emmigration or dispersal increases– Immigration decreases

Page 24: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Density dependent growth• Can model density dependent growth with

logistic equation:dN/dt=rN((K-N)/N)

K= population at equilibrium carrying capacity

• At K population growth rate is zero

Page 25: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Density dependent growth• As intrinsic rate of increase goes up,

behaviour of model changes:– Carrying capacity: one equilibrium value for N– Stable limit cycles: N oscillates among several

values– As R increases, number of values in cycle

doubles (for 2.1<R<2.57)– Eventually (R>2.57) dynamics are CHAOTIC.

Not random, highly density dependent, but unpredictable.

Page 26: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

• Time lags can also create cycles:– Resource availability changes with time and

population size (eg herbivores and food source)dN/dt=rN((K-N(t-T))/K)

– Classic example: lynx and hares…

Page 27: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Characteristics of populations

• Ecologists use life tables and fecundity schedules to organize demographic data:

– Age or stage-specific survivorship, birth rates, death rates, reproductive value etc.

– Can be based on cohorts (cohort life table) or age/stage classes (static life table)

– May contain the following parameters:Age/stage, number surviving (Nx), survivorship

(lx=Nx/N1),

mortality (dx=(lx-1-lx)), mortality rate (qx=dx/lx), fecundity (bx= offspring per individual),

reproductive value (Vx = bx+ Σ(lx+I/lx)bx+I)

Page 28: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Survivorship Curves• Plots of number of survivors (log scale)

versus age/stage.• Three basic shapes: different life histories.

Type I

Type II

Type III

Page 29: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

SurvivorshipWhat do the shapes of the survivorship curves

mean? Examples?

Type I

Type II

Type III

Page 30: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Importance

Page 31: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

ImportanceDemography affects current distributions,

historical range shifts/spread, gene frequencies, and population structures.

Population dynamics important for commercial species: yield, growth, survival, etc.

Use population models to create management plans for both endangered and invasive species

Herbivory (eg stock production) can affect population parameters of range species: Riginos and Hoffman (2003). Journal of Applied Ecology 40:615-625.

Page 32: Upcoming Seminars: EECB seminars – 4:00 Thurs in OSN 102 –Thurs Feb 12: Mark Lindberg (U. A. Fairbanks) “ Patterns and rates of dispersal in avian populations:

Lab: life cycle diagrams, matrix models, life tables, and their applications for management

Next lecture: metapopulations, life history strategies, allocation.