What is a Population

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What is a Population A collection of potentially interacting organisms of one species within a defined geographic area.

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What is a Population A collection of potentially interacting organisms of one species within a defined geographic area. Figure 14.1. Estimates of Population Size Recall the Lincoln index from recitation: M/N = m/n M is the total number marked; m is the number marked in the sample; - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What is a Population

What is a Population

 

A collection of potentially interacting organisms of one species within a defined geographic area.

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Figure 14.1

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Estimates of Population Size

 

Recall the Lincoln index from recitation:

M/N = m/n

M is the total number marked;

m is the number marked in the sample;

n is the sample size.

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Elementary Postulates

 

1. Every living organism has arisen from at least one parent of the same kind.

2. In a finite space there is an upper limit to the number of finite beings that can occupy or utilize that space.

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Populations grow by multiplication.A population increases in proportion to its size, in a manner analogous to a savings account earning interest on principal:

at a 10% annual rate of increase:a population of 100 adds 10 individuals in 1 year

a population of 1000 adds 100 individuals in 1 year

allowed to grow unchecked, a population growing at a constant rate would rapidly climb toward infinity

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Geometric population growth

 Usually think of animals increasing by distinct generations.

N(1) = N(0) + B – D + I – E

N(1) = N(0)R

N(2) = N(0)RR

N(t) = N(0)Rt

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Critical parameter is = net replacement rate (Ro).

N(t+1) = N(t)

where:N(t + 1) = number of individuals after 1 time unit

N(t) = initial population size

= ratio of population at any time to that 1 time unit earlier, such that λ = N(t + 1)/N(t)

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To calculate the growth of a population over many time intervals, we multiply the original population size by the geometric growth rate for the appropriate number of intervals t:

N(t) = N(0) t

For a population growing at a geometric rate of 50% per year ( = 1.50), an initial population of N(0) = 100 would grow to N(10) = N(0) 10 = 5,767 in 10 years.

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Given No = 5000; N1 = 6000;

What is N2 ?

N2 = (6/5)2 x 5000 = 7200

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Exponential Growth

Generations overlap, usually not discrete generations.

For convenience, most of our models are continuous.

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Think about a complex model approximated by may term in a potentially infinite series. Then consider how many of these terms are needed for the simplest acceptable model.

 

dN/dt = a + bN + cN2 + dN3 + ....

 

From parenthood postulate, N = 0 ==> dN/dt = 0, therefore a = 0.

Simplest model ===> dN/dt = bN, (or rN, where r is the intrinsic rate of increase.)

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Solve equation: N = No e rt

Alternative form: dN/dt = bN - dN = (b-d)N

Rarely do b and d remain constant,

but if well below what environment can support, then OK assumption.

Each species has optimum environment with r = max

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Figure 14.3

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Figure 14.6

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Human lice; r=.111/day

How fast will a population that starts at 100 lice increase?

(i.e., what is rate of increase of 100 lice?)

dN/dt = rN = .111 x 100 = 11.1 lice/day

 

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Human population in 1993 = 5,600,000,000

b = 26/1000, d = 9/1000

How fast was the population growing?

dN/dt = rN = (.017)(5,600,000,000) = 95,200,000

(i.e., in excess of 1/3 US population per year)

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Humans currently have b and d of 26 and 9 per 1000. How many years to double the population?

N = No e rt = Nox2

2 = ert

ln2/.017 = 40.77 yrs

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1700-1800 Human population from 600,000,000 ==> 900,000,000.

Calculate r.

r = ln (N/No) / t

= ln(9/6)/100

= .0040547

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Logistic Growth

There has to be a limit. Postulate 2.

Therefore add a second parameter to equation.

  dN/dt = rN + cN2

call c = -r/K

  dN/dt = rN ((K-N)/K)

Nt = K/[1+((K-No)/No)e-rt]

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Figure 14.18

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Figure 14.16

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Optimal yield problem.

dN/dt = rN - rN2/K

  d2N/dt2 = r - 2rN/K

  set = 0 N = K/2

 

If want maximum yield, should exercise continual cropping around N = K/2

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Figure 14.17

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Data ??

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Further Refinements of the Theory

 Third term to equation?

 More realism? Symmetry;

No reason why the curve has to be a symmetric curve with maximal growth at N = K/2.

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What if the population is too small? Is r still high under these conditions?

Need to find each other to mate

Need to keep up genetic diversity

Need for various social systems to work

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Examples of small population problems

Whales, Heath hens, Bachmann's warbler

dN/dt = rN[(K-N)/K][(N-m)/N]

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Instantaneous response is not realistic.

 

Need to introduce time lags into the system

dN/dt = rNt[(K-Nt-T)/K]

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Three time lag types

Monotonic increase of decrease: 0 < rT < e-1

Oscillations damped: e-1 < rT < /2

Limit cycle: rT > /2

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Finite difference equations and Chaos

Nt+1 = aNt(1-Nt)

Models populations with discrete, nonoverlapping generations, like many temperate zone insects.

if 1<a<3, population settles to a steady state.if 3<a<3.57.., population settles into a stable cycle.if 3.57..<a<4, population apparently random or chaotic.if 4< a, N runs away to minus infinity.

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This weird range of behaviors is generic to most difference equations that describe a population with a propensity to increase at low values and to decrease at high values. Similar behavior arises if there are many discrete but overlapping generations.