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Population Definition
Application of Population
Information
Factors that affect Population
Growth
Biotic (Intrinsic) Factors
Environmental Resistance Factors
Density Dependent Factors
Density Independent Factors
Lecture
Syllabus
IB 100/101 Home
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Text Readings in Lewis et al. | Testing Your Knowledge | "Thinking
Scientifically" |
Chapter 42
Pages 837-852 |
Page 851 Questions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 9 |
Page 852 Questions 1, 2, 3, and 4 |
Answers to many of these questions can be found on the
Text On-Line Learning Center
You may also ask questions and see answers to your classmates'
questions in Web Crossing in the "Talk to Jim, Jason, and Ed" discussion.
Objectives:
After studying this material you should be able to:
- Give an example of a population.
- Draw a simple graph illustrating a population that is growing at an
exponential rate of increase (J-shaped curve).
- Describe how population growth rate is calculated.
- Describe how and explain why each of the following factors affects
the growth of a population:
birth rate
death rate
immigration
emigration
population growth rate
fecundity
biotic or intrinsic factors
exponential population growth
logistic population growth
density dependent environmental resistance factors
density independent environmental resistance factors
- Explain the distinction between density dependent and density
independent environmental resistance factors that regulate population
growth.
- Explain the relationship between the concepts environmental
resistance factors, birth rate, death rate, population growth rate, and
carrying capacity.
What is a Population?
A population is a group of organisms of the same species in a given
geographic location. (Lewis et al., Life, pg. 838)
The Glossary on pg. 938 gives a slightly different wording of the same
concept, "A group of interbreeding organisms living in the same
area."
Understanding the demography of populations has many critical
applications:
Demography is the statistical study of populations, and includes such statistics as population size, density, and distribution.
- Conservation of species: Is this species endangered?
Species Information, from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
- Sustainability of harvest (eg. timber, fisheries)
No more fish and chips??? Overfishing has
slashed stocks--especially of large predator species--to an all-time low
worldwide, according to new data. if we don't manage this resource, we
will be left with a diet of jellyfish and plankton stew.
- Economic and urban planning
- Health care and epidemiology
Factors that affect the growth of Populations
What is population "growth"?
- What we might talk about as population size is actually population
density, the number of individuals per unit area (or unit volume).
- Population growth is based on four fundamental factors: birth
rate, death rate, immigration, and emigration.
Population growth rate = (birth rate + immigration) - (death rate
+ emigration)
"Per capita rates" are calculated as the number of events (births,
deaths, or growth) divided by the number of individuals in the
population over a specific time period. (Lewis et al., pg. 843)
Biotic or Intrinsic factors that affect population growth
Environmental Resistance Factors that Affect Birth and Death Rates
Obviously, populations cannot realistically grow exponentially.
There are environmental limits, called
environmental resistance factors, that affect the number of
individuals that can survive and reproduce in a given habitat.
Environmental resistance factors fall into two categories:
density dependent and density independent.
- A population explosion and crash. Graph: Lewis et al., Life, Fig. 42.7, pg. 844
- Density dependent environmental resistance factors (See Lewis,
et. al. Pg 845)
- Density dependent factors include the environmental resources
needed by the individuals of a population. Competition for food, water,
shelter, etc., results as the population density increases. The
survival, health, and reproduction of individuals will be affected if
they cannot acquire the basic requirements of life.
- Density dependent factors ALSO include environmental factors,
such as predators, infectious disease organisms, and parasites
that do not necessarily result in competition for needed resources, but
do affect the health, survival, and reproduction of individuals in the
population as population density increases. Individuals that are
diseased may have a reduced ability to reproduce. Dead individuals cannot reproduce.
- Density dependent factors are referred to as Environmental
Resistance Factors that determine the Carrying Capacity of
the environment for a population.
- Carrying Capacity - "The theoretical maximum number of
individuals that an environment can support for an indefinite time
period is its carrying capacity." (Lewis et al. pg. 845)
- Logistic Population Growth
- In the presence of density dependent environmental factors,
population growth is constrained at high population densities. This is
because the impact of density dependent factors depends on the
density of the population.
- At low population densities, density dependent factors exert little
influence on population growth, which initially grows rapidly.
This is to say that individuals have an abundance of resources so
their health is good. They have a high capacity to reproduce and are
less likely to die. At high population densities, density dependent factors exert an
increasing negative effect on population growth which slows and finally
stops at the carrying capacity.
The health of individuals is stressed because of lack of resources,
crowding, prevalent diseases, etc. Their reproductive capacity is
reduced and their liklihood of dying is greater.
- Density dependent factors therefore produce an S-shaped
growth curve.
Graph: Lewis et al., Life, Fig. 42.8, pg. 845
- Density Independent environmental resistance Factors (See
Lewis, et. al. Pg 846)
- Density Independent factors are Environmental Resistance
Factors that occur or have an effect on a population regardless of
the density of the population.
Density independent factors include weather phenomena and natural
disasters that affect the population, but the chance of their occurrence
or level of severity is unrelated to the density of the
population.Density independent factors may affect the availability of resources
that are required by the population (density dependent factors),
indirectly affecting the carrying capacity of the
environment.A hurricane might destroy trees that are the required nesting site
for a population of birds.
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