population change chapter 8. principles of population ecology population ecologists ask: 1) how many...

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Population Change Chapter 8

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Page 1: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Population Change

Chapter 8

Page 2: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population Ecology

Population ecologists ask:

1) How many are in the population?

2) Are its numbers increasing / decreasing?

3) What is its pattern of reproduction?

4) What is its pattern of mortality?

Page 3: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population EcologyPopulation Density (because you can’t count them all!):• Not enough to know just how many.• Need to know per unit area.• Which environmental factors may influence population

density?

20 / 100 m220 / 25 m2

Page 4: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population Ecology

How Do Populations Change in Size?

On a global scale (closed system):

Page 5: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population Ecology

How Do Populations Change in Size?

On a local scale (open system):

Page 6: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population EcologyHow Do Populations Change in Size?

Global scale:

Births and deaths per 1,000 people per year

r = b/1,000 – d/1,000

Growth rate

Birth rate

Death rate

Page 7: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population Ecology

How Do Populations Change in Size?

Local scale (all per 1,000 people):

r = (b – d) + (i – e)

Growth rate

Birth rate

Death rate

Immigration rate

Emigration rate

What would a positive r or a negative r tell you about the population?

Page 8: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population Ecology• Maximum Population Growth- under ideal

conditions = intrinsic rate of increase (biotic potential)

• Which factors could influence the intrinsic rate of increase?

J-shaped curve (exponential growth)

All species follow J-curve based on intrinsic rate.

Major variable is pop. size and time!

Page 9: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population EcologyEnvironmental Resistance-• Exponential growth at intrinsic cannot occur forever.• What factors prevent it from doing so?• Crowding makes a pop. more susceptible to parasites,

viruses, predators, waste, food / space shortage

S-shaped curve (logistic growth)

• Environment influences K (ex. drought)

• How could one environmental influence have a “domino” effect on many species?

• Rate of population growth is proportional to the amount of resources

Page 10: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Principles of Population EcologyOvershooting the carrying capacity can lead

to a population crash.

• Abrupt decline from high to low population density

• Over consumption of resources because of population size

Page 11: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Reproductive StrategiesLife History Strategies - Trade offs!

r-selected K-selectedvs.

high growth rate slow growth rate

small body size large body size

early maturity late maturity

short life span long life span

large broods small broods

little / no parental care high parental care

“perfect”: continual reproduction at intrinsic rate of increase with all offspring surviving to reproduce

But… addt’l energy needed for their own survival

Page 12: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Reproductive StrategiesSurvivorship: proportion of individuals alive at a

certain age (insurance companies used these!)

Page 13: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Factors that Affect Population SizeDensity-Dependent Factors-

• Factors that have a greater influence on population growth when density is high.

• Predation, competition, disease.

• Living space, food, cover, water, minerals, sunlight in high demand

• Large population: parasites and predators have more hosts / prey– survive longer / reproduce more

• In lab: control all factors except one

Page 14: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Factors that Affect Population SizeDensity-Dependence and Boom-or-Bust

Population Cycles • More prey - predator population increases

•Prey population decreases

•OR overwhelm food supply (plants=prey)

Page 15: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Factors that Affect Population Size

Case-in-Point: Predatory Prey Dynamics on Isle Royale

Canine parvovirus outbreak

Tick outbreak

Page 16: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Factors that Affect Population Size

Density-Independent Factors-

• Abiotic

• Regardless of population density, influences population growth.

• Frost, severe weather, fire.

• Example: Adult mosquitoes wiped out in winter. Species survives from hibernating larvae

Page 17: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

The Human Population: Demography

Human population size• Would not have occurred if not for:

•Food production technology

• Medical advancements

•Water quality

•Decline in birth rate and death rate

Page 19: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

The Human PopulationCurrent Population Numbers

Rapid growth primarily due to drop in death rates

Page 20: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

The Human PopulationProjecting Future Population Numbers

When will zero population growth occur?

•K for Earth: 7.7 billion (most recent analysis)

•Past analyses: 4 - 11 billion

•Assumptions: standard of living, consumption, tech. advancements, waste generation

Page 21: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of Countries

Most Populous Countries Insert Table 8.1

Page 22: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of CountriesDeveloped vs. Developing Countries

Demographics (includes migration)

Page 23: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of Countries

Developed vs. Developing Countries Demographics

Page 24: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of Countries

Demographic Stages

Page 25: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of CountriesAge Structure of Countries

Generalized Age Structure: Factors are age distribution and male-female ratio

Next Generation is larger

Next Generation is almost same size

Next Generation is smaller

Page 26: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of Countries

Examples:

Page 27: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of Countries

Examples:

Page 28: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of Countries

Examples:

Page 29: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of CountriesPopulation Under Age 15 (relative size of next

generation):

Page 30: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of the USCase-in-Point: US Immigration

• Birth rate declining

• Increasing rate of immigration

• Consumption overpopulation

• Estimates 300,000 illegal per year, 1 million legal

Page 31: Population Change Chapter 8. Principles of Population Ecology Population ecologists ask: 1) How many are in the population? 2) Are its numbers increasing

Demographics of the USCase-in-Point: US Immigration• Immigrate because of:

•Persecution

• High growth rate in developing countries reduces resources / jobs available

• Deteriorating environmental conditions in developing countries

• Top 5 immigrants: Mexico, Philippines, Vietnam, Dominican Republic, China

•70% poor with few skills, 30% college graduates

•Should the US increase or decrease immigrants?