Ecology.

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Presentation transcript:

Ecology

WATCH Go over test 7 Billion – are you typical? Go over Sections D and E.

FACTORS AFFECTING POPULATION SIZE Biotic Potential versus Environmental Resistance Fig. 9-3 p. 166

WATCH Biological Carrying Capacity

POPULATION ECOLOGY Population Growth Patterns: Exponential growth occurs when populations have plenty of food, space and have little or no competition or predators. Populations rapidly increase due to an abundance of resources. There are UNLIMITED resources. (J-shaped curve)

POPULATION ECOLOGY Exponential Growth

POPULATION ECOLOGY This growth is not sustainable – short lived in nature. Natural conditions are neither ideal nor constant; populations cannot grow forever and rarely grow at their reproductive potential. Resources are used up or the environment changes.

POPULATION ECOLOGY Logistic growth populations are limited by environmental factors and tend to attain equilibrium in size which is determined by available resources. (S-shaped curve)

POPULATION ECOLOGY Logistic Growth

POPULATION ECOLOGY Carrying capacity of a particular species is the maximum population that the ecosystem can support indefinitely. A population may increase beyond this number, but it cannot stay at this increased size due to resource availability.

POPULATION ECOLOGY Carrying Capacity

POPULATION ECOLOGY Because ecosystems change, carrying capacity is difficult to calculate exactly - it’s a theoretical limit. A species reaches its carrying capacity when it consumes a natural resource at the same rate at which the ecosystem produces the resources. The limited resource determines the carrying capacity for a species at a particular time.

POPULATION ECOLOGY

Environmental resistance CARRYING CAPACITY Carrying capacity is determined by biotic potential and environmental resistance. This is the number of a species' individuals that can be sustained indefinitely in a specific space. Environmental resistance Carrying capacity (K) Population size (N) Biotic potential Exponential growth Time (t)

DENSITY AND LIMITING FACTORS Factors that prevent a population from reaching its biotic potential. Population size can be limited in ways that may or may not depend on the density of the population.

DENSITY AND LIMITING FACTORS The density of a population may or may not affect how rapidly it can grow. 1. Density-Dependent Factors - Factors that have an increasing effect as the population increase. As organisms crowd together, these factors cause more damage and spread faster in larger populations. resource availability, predation, disease, competition, parasitism, stress due to overcrowding; infectious diseases

DENSITY AND LIMITING FACTORS 2. Density-Independent Factors – Factors that affect any population, regardless of density; NOT influenced by population size. These are abiotic factors in the community. weather, natural disasters, human activities, adaptations & behaviors of organisms

NATURAL POPULATION CURVES Fig. 9-7 p. 168

THE ROLE OF PREDATION IN CONTROLLING POPULATION SIZE

TO DO Do Sections G and H Section F due by tomorrow Quiz tomorrow over notes up to Community Ecology.