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Chapter 5 Populations
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Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution: Population Density.

Dec 27, 2015

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Caitlin Barnett
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Page 1: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

Chapter 5 Populations

Page 2: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

5.1 How Populations GrowA.Describing Population

1. Geographic Range: area inhabited

2. Density and Distribution:

Population Density - # of individuals per unit area

Distribution – individual spacing in a population (random, uniformly, clumping

Wild Flowers King PenguinStriped Catfish

3. Growth Rate: size of population over time (increase, decrease, stay the same)

4. Age Structure: # and age of males/females

Page 3: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

B.Population Growth

1.Birthrate & Death Rate: influence whether pop grows, stay the same or decreases

2.Immigration: moving into range

(increased good supply)

3.Emigration: moving out

of range (food shortage)

Page 4: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

C.Exponential Growth: occurs with unlimited resources;

# of offspring increases with each new generation

1.Organisms that reproduce rapidly :

(bacteria reproduce very 20 minutes) J–curve: slow growth first then faster

2. Organisms that reproduce slowly:

3. Organisms in new environment:

(invasive species: no natural predators)

Page 5: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

D.Logistic Growth

1.Phases of Growth:

Phase1: Exponential w/initial unlimited resources (few die; many reproducing)

Phase 2. Slows: pop. grows at slower rate

Phase 3. Stops: zero growth rate (curve levels off; pop. can remain here indefinitely)

Page 6: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

2.Logistic Growth Curve:

S-shaped curve

Exponential growth slows, then stops

Decreased birthrate; increased death rate

Decreased immigration; increased emigration

Page 7: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

3.Carrying Capacity:

Max # of species individuals environment can support

Birthrate = death rate; immigration = emigration

Slight pop. change over time; stabilizes at that approx #

Page 8: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

5.2 Limits to Growth

A.Limiting Factors: (ie: limiting nutrient controls productivity)

Control the growth of populations

Determines carrying capacity of envirnmt for species

Shaped history of life on earth (Darwin)

Page 9: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

B.Density Dependent Limiting Factors

Operate when # of org/unit area reach certain level

1. Competition: for limited essential resources w/ pop Within species: some thrive/reproduce; some starve (can

lower birthrate/increase death rate)

Between diff species: can drive evolutionary change

Page 10: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

2.Predation and Herbivory:

Predator-prey Relationships Pop. cycle up or down (or fluctuate) over time

Isle Royal: Wolves and moose

Herbivore Effects: herbivores/plants pop. also fluctuate

Isle Royale: Moose and Balsam Fir (overgrazing)

Humans as Predators Cod birthrate can’t keep up w/Hi death rate

Biologists use birthrate/age structure data est. limits

Page 11: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

3.Parasitism and Disease:

Both weaken/kill host; spread easier w/high population

Isle Royale Canine Parvovirus left 3 breeding females

4.Stress from overcrowding: Too much fighting: ↓ birthrates, ↑ death/emigration

CPV is life threatening and can affect the heart or intestinal tract with symptoms of vomiting/ diarrhea

Page 12: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

C.Density-Independent Limiting Factors:

Unusual weather/natl disasters affect all pops similarlyHurricanes, floods/wildfires

Can cause pop to “crash” (be decimated) then rebound

1.True Density Independence?

Moose pop exploded after CPV – pop crashed with harsh winter=effects greater w/unnaturally dense pop

2. Controlling Introduced Species

Artificial measures (removal) temporary/expensive

Best to find/introduce natural predator=sterilize for minimal adverse effects

Page 13: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

5.3 Human Population GrowthA. Historical Overview: Slow past growth w/limiting factors: scarce

food/predators/disease=↑ death rate=multiple offspring w/few surviving

1. Exponential Human Population Growth

Industrial revolution improved nutrition/medicine = ↓ death rates w/birthrates remaining hi

2. The Prediction of Malthus

Exponential growth can’t last

Growth limited by competition-war; scarce

resources-famine; parasitism-disease

o Density Dependent Limiting Factors

3. World Population Growth Slows

Exponential Growth through mid-sixties; then slowed

Page 14: Chapter 5 Populations. 5.1 How Populations Grow A.Describing Population 1.Geographic Range: area inhabited 2.Density and Distribution:  Population Density.

B. Patterns of Human Population Growth

Demography: study of human growth (birth/death rates and age structure)

1. The Demographic Transition

Shift from High birth/death rates (Phase 1) to low birth/death rates (Phase 3) = U.S, Japan, Europe; J to S curve

2. Age Structure and Population Growth

A higher % of young people = growing population; equal age group # = slower, steady growth

3. Future Population Growth

Approx. 9 billion by 2050; but grow more slowly than last 50 years