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This article explores the observations and behavior of insect populations throughout the seasons, including their increase in spring and summer, decrease in fall, and survival strategies during winter.
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Biology Bellwork – 10/17/12 • Describe some observations you can make about populations of insects over the course of a year? • The populations of flies or mosquitoes go up in the spring and summer and decline in the fall. Do they die out completely in winter? • A few individuals in each population find places to go over-winter, and some migrate.
Biology Bellwork – 10/24/12 • Explain how the improvement in shelter can increase the survival rate of a human population. • Adequate shelter provides defense against extremes of the environment such as temperature, precipitation, and wind. In addition, shelter provides defense against biotic factors in the environment such as venomous snakes, mosquitoes, other insects that harbor parasite, and large predators such as wolves and bears. All of these have the potential to shorten the life span of individuals, thereby affecting the human population as a whole.
Alternative Assignments • Write a paragraph comparing density-dependent and density-independent factors that can limit human populations. • Imagine that you are a housefly. Write a short comic strip, with illustrations, explaining what it is like to be a r-strategist from a fly’s view-point.
Bellwork 10/25/12 • Define the followings vocabulary terms: • Carrying Capacity • The maximum number of individuals in a species that an environment can support for the long term. • Limiting Factor • Biotic or abiotic factor that restricts the number, distribution, or reproduction of a population within a community.
Population Dynamics • Population: • All the individuals of a species that live together in an area at the same time • Demography: • The statistical study of populations, allows predictions to be made about how a population will change
Population Dynamics • Three Key Features of Populations • Size • Density • Dispersion
Three Key Features of Populations Size: number of individuals in an area
Three Key Features of Populations • Growth Rate: • Birth Rate (natality) - Death Rate (mortality) • How many individuals are born vs. how many die • Birth rate (b) − death rate (d) = rate of natural increase (r)
Three Key Features of Populations Density: measurement of population per unit area or unit volume Pop. Density = # of individuals ÷ unit of space
How Do You Affect Density? • Immigration:movement of individuals into a population • Emigration: movement of individuals out of a population • Density-dependent factors:Biotic factors in the environment that have an increasing effect as population size increases (disease, competition, parasites) • Density-independent factors:Abiotic factors in the environment that affect populations regardless of their density (temperature, weather)
Factors That Affect Future Population Growth Immigration + + - Population Mortality Natality - Emigration
Three Key Features of Populations • Dispersion: describes the spacing of organisms relative to each other • Clumped • Uniform • Random
How Are Populations Measured? • Population density = number of individuals in a given area or volume • Count all the individuals in a population • Estimate by sampling • Mark-Recapture Method
How Do Populations Grow? • Idealized models describe two kinds of population growth: • Exponential Growth 2. Logistic Growth
Bellwork – 10/26/12 • An employer offers two equal jobs of one hour each for fourteen days. The first pays $10/hour. The second pays only 1 cent the first day, but the rate doubles each day. • Which job would you rather have? Job #1 $10 x 14 days = $140 Job #2 $0.01 + $0.02 + $0.04 + $0.08 + $0.16 + $0.32 + $0.64 + $1.28 + $2.56 + $5.12 + $10.24 + $20.48 + $40.96 + $81.92 = $163.83
Exponential Growth Curve Figure 35.3A
Factors Limiting Growth Rate • Declining birth rate or increasing death rate are caused by several factors including: • Limited food supply • The buildup of toxic wastes • Increased disease • Predation
Reproductive Strategies • R Strategists • Short life span • Small body size • Reproduce quickly • Have many young • Little parental care • Ex: cockroaches, weeds, bacteria
Reproductive Strategies • K Strategists • Long life span • Large body size • Reproduce slowly • Have few young • Provides parental care • Ex: humans, elephants
Age Distribution • Distribution of males and females in each age group of a population • Used to predict future population growth
Human Population Growth • J curve growth • Grows at a rate of about 80 million yearly • r =1.3% • Why doesn’t environmental resistance take effect? • Altering their environment • Technological advances • The cultural revolution • The agricultural revolution • The industrial-medical revolution
The Human Population • Doubled three times in the last three centuries • About 6.1 billion and may reach 9.3 billion by the year 2050 • Improved health and technology have lowered death rates