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Populations
What is a population?
A population is a group of individuals of the same species living in a defined area.
How Populations GrowCharacteristics of Populations
1. Geographic distribution – area inhabited, species specific
2. density – number of individuals per unit area – Fig. 5-1 3. growth rate – determined by the number of births, number of deaths, number of individuals entering and leaving 4. age structure – determined by how many individuals of different ages make up a given population
How Populations GrowPopulation Growth – Fig. 5-2
1. Immigration – movement of individuals into an area
2. Emigration – movement of individuals out of an area
How Populations GrowPopulation Growth (cont.)
3. Exponential Growth – the geometric increase of a population as it gr0ws in an ideal, unlimited environment - Fig. 5-3(J- shape cure) What keeps population from growing exponentially?
How Populations GrowPopulation Growth (cont.) 4. Logistic Growth – describes population growth that levels off as population size approaches carrying capacity – Fig. 5-4 (S- shape curve)
How Populations GrowPopulation Growth (cont.) 4. Logistic Growth (cont.)
1. carrying capacity – maximum population size that a particular environment can support at a particular time with no degradation of the habitat
2. most species follow this growth model
Limits to GrowthLimiting Factors – factors that decrease population growth – Fig. 5-5
Competition, Predation, Parasitism and disease are examples of density-dependent limiting factors
Drought and other climate extremes and human disturbances are examples of density-independent limiting factors
Limits to GrowthDensity-Dependent – a death rate that rises or a birth rate that declines as population density rises
1. Competition – organisms compete for food, shelter, mates
a. Intraspecific competition – occurs between members of the
same species for limited resources
Limits to GrowthDensity-Dependent – a death rate that rises or a birth rate that declines as population density rises
1. Competition (cont.)
b. Interspecific competition – occurs between members of different species for limited resources – this is a major force behind evolutionary change
c. Only one species can occupy a niche in the same place at the same time (niche – species’ use of biotic and abiotic resources)
Limits to Growth
Limits to GrowthDensity-Dependent (cont.)
2. Predation – an interaction between species in which one species, the predator, eats the other, the prey – Fig. 5-7
Limits to GrowthDensity-Dependent (cont.)
3. parasitism – a symbiotic relationship in which the parasite benefits at the
expense of the host – Fig. 5-8
Limits to GrowthDensity-Independent Factors – any factor that affects a population by the same percentage, regardless of density
1. Drought and other climate extremes
2. Human disturbances
Human Population GrowthWhat type of growth pattern is shown in Fig. 5-10?
Human Population GrowthPatterns of Population Growth – What factors explain why populations in different countries grow at different rates?
1. Demographic transition – change in a population from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates – Fig. 5-11
Human Population GrowthPatterns of Population Growth (cont.)
2. Age structure – numbers of people in different age groups in the population
Human Population GrowthFuture population Growth – Will the human population grow at its current rate, or will it level out to a logistic growth curve and become stable?