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Populations

Populations

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Populations. Population or not?. The monkeys in a rainforest. E. coli bacteria growing in a petri dish. Humans on Earth. The cats in my neighborhood. The trees in a forest. BioEd Online. Population. A group of organisms of the same species that live within a given area. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Populations

Populations

Page 2: Populations

Population or not?

The monkeys in a rainforest

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E. coli bacteria growing in a petri dish

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Humans on Earth

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The cats in my neighborhood.

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The trees in a forest

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Population• A group of organisms of

the same species that live within a given area

Ostriches are nomadic, wandering

in small groups.

Aspen trees are quick to pioneer areas that have been disturbed

by fire.

BioEd Online

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a) Dispersion

• Give an example of each type

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Gannets nesting

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Solitary tree sloth

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School of fish

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b) Population density (total population size per unit of area)

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c) Growth Rate(Births + Immigrants) - (Deaths + Emigrants) Population Size

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One bacterium divides in two in 20 minutes. This process continues for several days.

• Sketch the population growth graph.

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Exponential growth curve (J shape)

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Exponential growth is a rapid population increase due to an abundance of resources.

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Logistic growth curve (S shape) isdue to a population facing limited resources. •Carrying capacity is the maximum number of individuals in a

population that the environment can support

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Ecological factors limit population growth

• Density-dependent limiting factors are affected by the number of individuals in a given area.

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Density-dependent limiting factors are affected by the number of individuals in a

given area.

• Competition for food, shelter

• Predation• Parasitism and

disease

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Density-independent limiting factors limit a population’s growth regardless of the density

• Unusual weather• Natural disasters• Human activities

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Density - dependent or density – independent factor?

• Tornado• independent

• Food supply• dependent

• Amount of rainfall• independent

• Temperature• independent

• Available drinking water• dependent

• Spreading of a disease• dependent

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Reproductive Strategiesr-strategists (rapid growth)

K-strategists (near carrying capacity)

•Early reproduction•Short life span•High mortality•Little parental care•Large number of offspring•Insects, amphibians, bony fish

•Reproduce late in life•Long life span•Low mortality•High parental care•Few offspring•Humans, other large mammals, sharks•Logistic growth curve

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Survivorship curves

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Choose type I, II, or III for

• Humans• Fish• Lizards• Birds• Insects• Lions• Squirrels• Plants

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Population Pyramids

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Who are the circled people? What is significant about them?

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Most Populated Cities (1/6/2007)

RankCity / Urban

area Country Population Land area(in km2)

Population Density/km2

1 Tokyo/Yokohama Japan 33,200,000 6,993 4750

2 New York Metro USA 17,800,000 8,683 2050

3 Sao Paulo Brazil 17,700,000 1,968 9000

4 Seoul/Incheon South Korea 17,500,000 1,049 16,700

5 Mexico City Mexico 17,400,000 2,072 8400

6 Osaka/Kobe/Kyoto Japan 16,425,000 2,564 6400

7 Manila Philippines 14,750,000 1,399 10,550

8 Mumbai India 14,350,000 484 29,6509 Delhi India 14,300,000 1,295 11,050

10 Jakarta Indonesia 14,250,000 1,360 10,500

64 Atlanta USA 3,500,000 5,083 700

http://www.citymayors.com/statistics/largest-cities-population-125.html

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Growth curve for the human population

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Doubling Time• The amount of time needed for a

population to double• Doubling time (in years) = 70 annual percent growth rate• The world’s annual growth rate is about

1.75%. What is the current doubling time?• 40 years

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What is an ecological footprint?

• The demands a person places on the environment in terms of land, water, food, waste, fibers,etc. • Go to www.myfootprint.org andtake the quiz. Bring in your results.

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• "It's up to us to make a global effort to limit population growth - or we can wait until the environment does it for us."

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Sources cited• http://www.biology.iupui.edu/biocourses/N100H/ch39pop.html• http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/projects/cases/squirrel_monkey/monkey.gif• http://office.microsoft.com/clipart/basket.aspx• http://www.frame37gallery.com/gfo• http://www-popexpo.ined.fr/eMain.htmlrest22.htm• http://www.prb.org/Content/NavigationMenu/PRB/AboutPRB/Population_Today1/may99_pt.pdf