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Chapter 17 Lecture Outline See PowerPoint Image Slides for all figures and tables pre-inserted into PowerPoint without notes. Population Characteristics. A population is a group of organisms of the same species located in the same place at the same time.
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Chapter 17 Lecture Outline See PowerPoint Image Slides for all figures and tables pre-inserted into PowerPoint without notes.
Population Characteristics • A population is a group of organisms of the same species located in the same place at the same time. • A species is the largest possible population. • Usually the term population is used to describe portions of a species.
Gene Frequency • A measure of how often a specific gene shows up in the gametes of a population • Two populations of the same species can have very different gene frequencies.
Gene Flow • The movement of a gene • From one generation to another • From one population to another when animals migrate • Both types of gene flow usually occur together.
Age Distribution • The number of organisms in each age in the population • Organisms are grouped by their reproductive status. • Prereproductive juveniles • Reproductive adults • Postreproductive adults
Age Distribution • The age categories of a population may not contain the same number of individuals. • The age structure of some species will change dramatically over the course of a season. • Birds, flowering plants • Age structure impacts how fast the population will grow.
Sex Ratio • The number of males compared to the number of females • Birds and mammals • Those that have mate-bonding frequently have a 1:1 ratio of males to females. • Those without mate-bonding usually have more females than males. • Harems • Insects usually have far more females than males. • Sex ratios do not apply to hermaphroditic species.
Population Distribution • Describes the way individuals within a population are arranged with respect to one another • Three basic arrangements • Even, random, clumped
Population Density • The number of organisms of a species per unit area • Population density varies with • Success of the individuals • Resources available • Populations that are highly concentrated will begin to experience competition. • Population pressure describes how the intensity of competition causes dispersal. • Dispersal relieves the pressure and can lead to new populations. • If dispersal doesn’t happen, then individuals will begin to die.
Reproductive Capacity • The theoretical number of offspring that could be produced by a population • Also called biotic potential • Usually larger than the number of offspring needed to maintain the population
Reproductive Capacity • Two strategies for maintaining the species • Have a lot of offspring, but not invest a lot of energy in them after birth • The probability of survival to reproductive age is slim. • Have fewer offspring, but invest a lot of energy in them after birth • The probability of survival to reproductive age is quite good.
The Population Growth Curve • The growth of a population is dependent on • The rate at which organisms enter the population • Immigration and birth • Natality = the # of new individuals added by birth/1000 individuals • The rate at which organisms leave the population • Emigration and death • Mortality = the # of individuals leaving by death/1000 individuals
The Population Growth Curve • Population growth curves graph the change in population size over time. • Four phases can be seen in the curve. • Lag phase • Exponential growth phase • Deceleration phase • Stable equilibrium phase
Lag Phase • A period of time immediately following the establishment of the population • Population is small • Growth is happening slowly • Both natality and mortality are low • Occurs slowly because reproduction takes time
Exponential Growth Phase • The period of time when the population is growing rapidly. • As the number of individuals increases, then there are more individuals available to reproduce. • During this phase, populations increase by the same percent each year. • Natality is greater than mortality. • Mice population • Two mice mate and have 4 • Those four mate and have 8 • Those eight mate and produce 16
Deceleration Phase • Occurs when population growth rate begins to slow • Population continues to grow until birthrate and deathrate become equal
Stable Equilibrium Phase • The period of time when the population stops growing • Maintains a stable size • Exponential growth cannot continue indefinitely. • The availability of resources will limit population growth. • When a population becomes large enough, resources will be in short supply. • Mortality will increase to the point where it equals natality. • Large organisms that live a long time tend to reach stable equilibrium.
Alternate Population Growth Strategies • K-strategists are large organisms that a live long time and reach a population size that can be sustained (as just described). • r-strategists are small organisms with short lifespans and tend to have fluctuating population that do not reach a stable equilibrium phase • Characterized by a “crash” after rapid exponential growth
Limits to Population Size • Factors that determine the size at which a population will reach stable equilibrium • Called limiting factors • Collectively known as environmental resistance
Extrinsic and Intrinsic Limiting Factors • Extrinsic factors come from outside the population and limit population growth. • Predators, availability of nutrients, natural disasters • Intrinsic factors come from within the population and limit population growth. • Crowded conditions leading to • Decreased reproduction • Decreased # of offspring produced per reproductive event • Decrease in maternal care • Increase in death rates
Density Dependent Limiting Factors • These factors become more effective at limiting population size as the population gets bigger. • Predators are more likely to capture individuals in a large population. • Disease epidemics are more common in large populations. • Competition for resources increases as population size increases. • Intrinsic factors such as decreased reproductive rates occur as population size increases. • Populations of large, long-lived organisms are usually controlled by these factors.
Density Independent Limiting Factors • These factors control population growth no matter how large the population is. • Usually accidental extrinsic factors • Weather patterns • Natural disasters • Drought/excessive rainfall • Populations of small, short-lived organisms are often controlled by these factors.
Categories of Limiting Factors • Factors that limit population growth can be categorized as • Availability of raw materials • For plants • Nitrogen, water, magnesium • For animals • Water, minerals, materials/sites for housing/nesting, food (as a source of carbon and nitrogen) • Availability of energy • Availability of light to plants • Availability of food to animals
Categories of Limiting Factors • Production and disposal of waste products • Usually not relevant for plant species • Animal species generate more waste. • Waste can be toxic. • As waste builds up, reproduction slows, death rates increase. • Accounts for the death phase in bacteria • Follows stable equilibrium phase
Categories of Limiting Factors • Interactions with other organisms • Predation, parasitism and competition limit population growth. • These interactions usually • Involve more than one population • Limit the size of both populations involved • Generate population cycles • Lemming example • Mutualistic interactions allow populations to grow at a faster rate than they would have alone.
Carrying Capacity • Populations at stable equilibrium phase have reached their maximum size for that environment. • This maximum, sustainable population size is called carrying capacity. • Determined by a set of limiting factors • Environmental changes, succession, disease, and natural disasters can change carrying capacity for a given population. • The size of the organism and the size of its habitat can determine carrying capacity.
Limiting Factors to Human Population Growth • Human populations follow the same pattern of growth. • They are limited by the same kinds of factors. • The human population growth curve • Shows the lag and exponential phases • Although the human population has approached carrying capacity for some time, • Technology continues to increase carrying capacity. • Nevertheless, limiting factors will cause human population growth to level off.
Available Raw Materials • Include • Drinking water • Irrigation water • Iron ore • Silicon • Food • Many portions of the global human population do not have enough food. • However, the world can produce enough food to feed everyone. • Political and economic barriers prevent equal distribution of food.
Availability of Energy • Ultimately, humans depend on sunlight for energy. • Solar energy can be stored in fossil fuels. • However, limited reserves of petroleum, natural gas and coal exist. • It is hard to predict how long these will last. • Rate of use of the reserves increases as population size increases. • It took millions of years to build up these reserves, but we are using them at a rate that will deplete them in a matter of hundreds of years.
Production of Wastes • Human biological wastes can be decomposed by detrivores. • Technological wastes cannot be decomposed by organisms. • Excess technological wastes cause pollution. • Most of this waste is toxic and is damaging the environment.
Interactions with Other Organisms • Humans interact with other species in many ways. • We are hosts for a variety of parasites. • Bacteria and viruses • We are predators of a number of species. • We have mutualistic relationships with • Domesticated and wild animals • A number of plant species • A variety of bacterial species
Interactions with Other Organisms • We compete with other species for resources. • Because we win, we frequently displace other species. • This has caused a number of extinctions. • We compete with one another for resources. • Evident in an increase in infant mortality
Control of Human Population is a Social Problem • Humans are able to predict the outcome of a specific course of action. • We have the information to control the human population and improve health and quality of life. • However, we do not always make the best unbiased decisions. • We tend not to consider what is best for the population. • We tend to consider what is best for us, individually.
Control of Human Population is a Social Problem • Continued population growth will present more social, political and economic problems than biological problems. • Will likely result in increased famine and starvation • One major factor seems to be the educational status of women. • Women with higher levels of education have fewer children. • Improving the education of women may be one social strategy for limiting population growth.