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EK 4.A.5 Communities are composed of populations of organisms that interact in complex ways. Data Analysis and Mathematical Models. Populations. Size is usually designated as N (total number of individuals) Density – total number of individuals per area or volume
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EK 4.A.5 Communities are composed of populations of organisms that interact in complex ways Data Analysis and Mathematical Models
Populations • Size is usually designated as N (total number of individuals) • Density – total number of individuals per area or volume • Dispersion – how individuals in a population are distributed
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Age structure – is a description of the abundance of individuals of each age • Rapid growth – many young, few elderly; developing countries • Slow growth – larger at the bottom that slowly narrow; the US • Zero growth – tiers of equal width; Italy
Growth Patterns & Interactions • About 1,000 years ago the human population began population growth thanks to increasing the carrying capacity of our environment • Increase in food supply • Reduction in disease • Reduction in human waste • Expansion of habitat
Growth Patterns and Interactions • Survivorship Curves describe how mortality of individuals in a species varies during their lifetimes • 3 types of curves • Type 1 • Type 2 • Type 3
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Type 1 Survivorship describe species in which most individuals live to middle age; after that mortality is high • Examples: Humans, Elephants
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Type 2 Survivorship describes organisms in which the length of survivorship is random, that is, the likelihood of death is the same at any age – constant death rate • Examples: Rodents and invertebrates
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Type 3 Survivorship describe species in which most individuals die young, with only a relative few surviving to reproductive age and beyond • Examples: oysters, plants, free-swimming larvae, frogs
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Biotic Potential is the maximum growth rate of a population under ideal conditions • Take into consideration the following: • Age at reproductive maturity • Clutch size • Frequency of reproduction • Reproductive lifetime • Survivorship of offspring to reproductive maturity
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Limits to Growth • Density-Dependent factors are those factors whose limiting effect becomes more intense as the population density increases • Examples – parasite & disease transmission; competition for resources; predation
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Limiting Growth Factors • Density-Independent factors occur independently of the density of the population • Examples – natural disasters such as fires, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions; extreme climates such as storms and frosts
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Exponential Growth in a population occurs whenever the reproductive rate is greater than zero. • Producing a J shaped curve • G=rN • G stands for growth, r stands for the per capita rate of increase, and N stands for the population size
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Logistic Growth occurs when limiting factors restrict the size of the population to the carrying capacity of the habitat • Producing a S shaped curve • G=rN*(K-N)/K • K stands for the carrying capacity; as N approaches K the growth rate is slowed, eventually reaching zero growth
Growth Patterns & Interactions • Exponential and logistic growth patterns are associated with two kinds of life-history strategies: • R-selected species • K-selected species
Growth Patterns & Interactions • R-selected species – • Rapid growth (J shaped curve) • Opportunistic species – grasses and insects • Quickly invade a habitat and reproduce immediately (after reproducing they die) • Produce many offspring that are small, mature quickly and require little if any parental care
Growth Patterns & Interactions • K selected species • Population size remains relatively constant at carrying capacity, K – s shaped curve • Produce few offspring that are larger in size and require extensive parental care • Reproduction occurs repeatedly during their lifetime