grade 10 - population ecology
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Grade 10 - Population Ecology Let's have fun!TRANSCRIPT
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sir awan
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Ecology - Study of interactions among organisms and their environment
Conservation biology, environmentalism:preservation of natural world
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• Biosphere
• Bioma
• Ecosystemas
• Community
• Population
• Individu
• Organ system
• Organ
• Tissue
• Cell
• Molecular
ECOSYSTEM LEVELEucalyptus forest
COMMUNITY LEVELAll organisms ineucalyptus forest
POPULATION LEVELGroup of flying foxes
ORGANISM LEVELFlying fox
ORGAN SYSTEM LEVELNervous system
ORGAN LEVELBrain
Brain Spinal cord
Nerve
TISSUE LEVELNervous
tissue
CELLULAR LEVELNerve cell
MOLECULAR LEVELMolecule of DNA
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Population: All the individuals of a species that live together in an area
Demography: The statistical study of populations, allows predictions to be made about how a population will change
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Three Key Features of Populations Size Density Dispersion
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Three Key Features of Populations
Size: number of individuals in an area
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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)
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Density: measurement of population per unit area or unit volume
Pop. Density = # of individuals ÷ unit of space
Three Key Features of Populations
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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)
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Immigration
Emigration
Natality MortalityPopulation+
+
-
-
Factors That Affect Future Population Growth
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Population Dispersion
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Dispersion: describes the spacing of organisms relative to each other– Clumped - often correlates with resources
– Uniform: interactions among individuals
– Random: no pattern
Three Key Features of Populations
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Population density = number of individuals in a given area or volume
Count all the individuals in a population
Estimate by sampling Mark-Recapture Method
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Idealized models describe two kinds of population growth:
1. Exponential Growth has no upper limit and populations grow very quickly
2. Logistic Growth has a limit and growth approches this limit in a sigmoidal fashion
Logistic growth is more realistic in real life, but exponential growth is a better model for bacterial cultures, etc. that have unlimited resources and space
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Carrying Capacity (k): The maximum population size that
can be supported by the available resources
There can only be as many organisms as the environmental resources can support
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• A J-shaped growth curve, described by the equation G = rN, is typical of exponential growth
– G = the population growth rate
– r = the intrinsic rate of increase, or growth rate in an ideal environment (births-deaths)
– N = the population size
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Figure 35.3A
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– K = carrying capacity
– The term (K - N)/K accounts for the leveling off of the curve
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During the initial stage, during the lag phase, the rate of plant growth is slow. Rate of growth then increases rapidly during the exponential phase. After some time the growth rate slowly decreases due to limitation of nutrients. This phase constitutes the stationary phase.
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Declining birth rate or increasing death rate are caused by several factors including: Limited food supply The buildup of toxic wastes Increased disease Predation
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About every 10 years, both hare and lynx populations have a rapid increase (a "boom") followed by a sharp decline (a "bust")
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r Selection (many offspring)
Short life span Small body size Reproduce quickly Have many young Little parental care Ex: cockroaches,
weeds, bacteria
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• K Selection (few offspring)
Long life span Large body size Reproduce slowly Have few young Provides parental
care Ex: humans,
elephants
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Distribution of males and females in each age group of a population
Used to predict future population growth
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J curve growth Why doesn’t environmental resistance take
effect? Altering their environment Technological advances
The cultural revolution The agricultural revolution The industrial-medical revolution
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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
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What next?
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