Top Banner
CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01
25

CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Mar 31, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity

Section 01

Page 2: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY

1. Three general patterns of population distribution occur in a habitat: clumping, uniform distribution and random dispersion.

a) Most species live in clumps b) Uniform pattern distribution may occur where a resource

such as water c) In random distribution members of a species are placed in

seemingly random placement.

Page 3: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Distribution Patterns

PLAYANIMATION

Page 4: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Which pattern is this?

Fig. 8-2c, p. 162

Page 5: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Fig. 8-2b, p. 162

Which pattern is this?

Page 6: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Fig. 8-2a, p. 162

Which pattern is this?

Page 7: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

2. Four variables influence/govern population size: births, deaths, immigration, and emigration

a) Populations increase through births and immigration

b) Populations decrease through deaths and emigration

Page 8: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

3. How fast a population grows or declines depends on its age structure.a) Prereproductive age: not mature enough to

reproduce.b) Reproductive age: those capable of

reproduction.c) Postreproductive age: those too old to

reproduce.

Page 9: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

A Population’s Age Structure Determines its Potential for Growth

PLAYANIMATION

Page 10: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Age Structure Diagram

Populations with a pyramid-shaped age structure will grow explosively.

Populations with a rectangular age structure will grow much slower.

Page 11: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

4. No population can increase its size indefinitely due to limited resources such as light, water, and nutrients and because of competitors or predators

a) The biotic potential is the population’s capacity for growth

b) The intrinsic rate of increase (r) is the rate at which a population would grow if it had unlimited resources.

Page 12: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

5. Environmental resistance consists of factors

that limit population growtha) Carrying capacity (K): the maximum population of

a given species that a particular habitat can sustain indefinitely without degrading the habitat

b) Populations grow rapidly with ample resources, but as resources become limited, its growth rate slows and levels off.

Figure 8-4Figure 8-4

Page 13: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Fig. 8-3, p. 163

EnvironmentalResistance

Time (t)

Pop u

lati o

n si

ze ( N

)

Carrying capacity (K)

ExponentialGrowth

BioticPotential

PLAYANIMATION

Page 14: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

6. A population can grow rapidly with ample resources

a) With few resource limitations, This population will have a fixed rate of growth that will take be a J-shaped growth curve

b) This represents its intrinsic rate of increase (r) or biotic potential

Page 15: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Animation: Exponential Growth

PLAYANIMATION

Page 16: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

7. This exponential growth is converted to logistic growth when the populations face environmental resistance

a) In logistic growth, the growth rate levels off as population size reaches or nears carrying capacity

b) The sigmoid (s-shaped) population growth curve shows that the population size is stable

Page 17: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

8. As a population levels off, it often fluctuates slightly above and below the carrying capacity

a) Overshooting an environment’s resources often is a result of a reproductive time lag

b) The reproductive time lag can produce a dieback/crash of organisms unless the organisms can find new resources or move to an area with more resources

c) If the carrying capacity of an area is exceeded, changes in the area itself can reduce future carrying capacity

Page 18: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Fig. 8-4, p. 164

Carrying capacity

Year

Num

ber o

f she

ep (m

illio

ns)

Overshoot

Page 19: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

9. Exceeding Carrying Capacity: Move, Switch Habits, or Decline in Size

a) Over time species may increase their carrying capacity by developing adaptations.

b) Some species maintain their carrying capacity by migrating to other areas.

c) So far, technological, social, and other cultural changes have extended the earth’s carrying capacity for humans.

Page 20: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Fig. 8-6, p. 165

Num

ber o

f rei

ndee

r

Populationovershootscarryingcapacity

Carryingcapacity

Year

PopulationCrashes

Page 21: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Population Crash

PLAYVIDEO

Page 22: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

10. The density of a population may or may not affect how rapidly it can grow

a) Population density: the number of individuals in a population found in a particular area or volume.

b) Density-independent population controls affect a population’s size regardless of its density (abiotic factors: weather)

c) Density-dependent factors population controls have a greater affect on the population as its density increases (biotic factors:disease)

Page 23: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

11.Population sizes may stay the same, increase, decrease, vary in regular cycles, or change erratically.a) Stable: fluctuates slightly above and below carrying

capacity because species are living under fairly constant environmental conditions

b) Irruptive: populations explode and then crash to a more stable level which is characteristic of short-lived, rapidly reproducing species

c) Cyclic: populations fluctuate and regular cyclic or boom-and-bust cycles.

d) Irregular: erratic changes possibly due to chaos or drastic change.

Page 24: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

12. Interaction between predators and their prey change in cycles

a) Hypothesis of top-down control of prey by predators may not be only explanation for cycling

b) Bottom-up control hypothesis is that plants consumed too rapidly by herbivores for replacements to keep up

Page 25: CH 08 Population & Carrying Capacity Section 01. A. POPULATION DYNAMICS AND CARRYING CAPACITY 1.Three general patterns of population distribution occur.

Fig. 8-7, p. 166

Popu

latio

n si

ze (t

hous

ands

)

Year

LynxHare