Factors Affecting Population Numbers. Carrying capacity: the largest population of a species that an environment can support. 4 factors that determine.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Section #1: How Populations Change in Size
Advertisements

5 POPULATIONS.
CHAPTER 5 By PresenterMedia.com Populations.
1.3 Populations
Populations & Limits to Growth. Characteristics of a Population  Geographic Distribution: area inhabited by a population bacteria: 1 cm 3 whale: millions.
Populations Chapter 5.
Ch 5- Population Why do populations change?
Living Things! Factors that affect living things are:
Population. Members of the same species living in a specific geographic area. Species – A group of similar organisms that can breed and produce fertile.
Chapter 8: Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology 8-1 POPULATION DYNAMICS & CARRYING CAPACITY Population – all members of the.
EQ: How does succession lead to a climax community? SUCCESSION.
Population Growth SC.912.L.17.5.
The Biosphere. Earth: A Living Planet General Vocabulary Ecology: The study of how living organisms interact with each other and with their surroundings.
Ecology The branch of biology that studies the way living things interact with each other and with their physical environment. It looks at the ways an.
Chapter 14 Interactions in an Ecosystem. Animals and Their Habitats.
Populations.
Chapter 8: Population Dynamics, Carrying Capacity, and Conservation Biology 8-1 POPULATION DYNAMICS & CARRYING CAPACITY Population – all members of the.
What is population? Group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area.
Populations.
Chapter 5 Section 2 Limits to Growth
Ecosystems Part 3 Populations.
Interactions Within Ecosystems
Ecology The branch of biology that studies the way living things interact with each other and with their physical environment. It looks at the ways an.
CHAPTER 5 POPULATIONS.
Population Dynamics.
Chapter 5: Populations.
Ecosystems are always changing. Chapter 2 Section 3.
Interactions in the Ecosystem
Populations Biology
How Populations Grow Read the lesson title aloud to students.
Populations A group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area.
Snowshoe Hare and Canada Lynx Population: a group the same species that live in the same place at the same time Resources: food, water, shelter, space.
Ecology: Chapter 1.3 Populations. Framing Questions  What is a population?  What is “carrying capacity” and what factors influence it?  What is the.
 A population consists of interbreeding members of one species living in a specific area, more or less isolated from other members of their species.
Population Dynamics Day 4
Populations Science Bennett. Can any population of organisms keep growing forever? Changes in a population in one part of a food web affects populations.
Populations.  A population consists of interbreeding members of one species living in a specific area, more or less isolated from other members of their.
Population Ecology Chapter 4. GPS SB4 Students will assess the dependence of all organisms on one another and the flow of energy and matter within their.
1. Population and community ecology 2 © Zanichelli editore 2015.
How populations grow Chapter 14 – Notesheet II 14-3 – population density & distribution 14-4 – population growth curves.
Unit2: Life Over Time Chapter 6: Evolution of Living Things 6.1 Earth has been home to living things for about 3.8 billion years 6.2 Species change over.
Characteristics of Populations Three important characteristics of a population are its:  geographic distribution  population density  growth rate.
Population Ecology Mrs. Gamari. Ecology  The study of the interaction between organisms and their environment (living and non-living).  Biotic – living.
Chapter 19- Populations A population is a group of organisms of the same species living in the same place at the same time Millions of different populations.
8.1 POPULATIONS CLASSROOM CATALYST. OBJECTIVES Describe the three main properties of a population. Describe exponential population growth. Describe how.
Population = all members of same species (interbreeding organisms) within an ecosystem.
Populations. Populations – focus questions How does a change in one population affect another population? What is the biotic potential of a species? What.
Populations. A population is a group of organisms of the same species living in the same place at the same time. Populations evolve according to their.
 a. When individuals produce more offspring at a time  B. Reproduce more often  C. Reproduce earlier in life  Reproducing earlier in life has greatest.
SUCCESSION How do habitats change over time?. Primary Succession Succession is the gradual, sequential changing of an area. The habitat changes until.
Succession… Changes in the structure of a community of organisms; the replacement of existing species by more recently arriving species.
1.3 Populations
Populations and Resources. Population Is a group of organisms of one species that lives in the same place, at the same time, and can successfully reproduce.
Populations. A population is all the individuals of a species that live in the same area.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall 5-1 How Populations Grow.
6/8/2016SB4d1 ECOLOGY Population Growth. SB4D Students will assess the dependence of all organisms on one another and the flow of energy and matter within.
Ecology – Part 3 – Honor’s Biology Carrying Capacity Population Growth Human Population Biodiversity.
14.1: Habitat & Niche  Key concept: Every organism has a habitat and a niche.
14.1: Habitat & Niche  Key concept: Every organism has a habitat and a niche.
3. Population Growth.
April 17, 2012 List four biogeochemical processes that cycle nutrients. Explain the difference between primary and secondary succession. Give an example.
Populations.
Population Growth Curves
Populations.
Populations.
2.3 Ecosystems are always changing
(S-shaped). The curve has three distinct regions.
Unit 4- Interaction of Living Things
Populations & Ecological Succession
Presentation transcript:

Factors Affecting Population Numbers

Carrying capacity: the largest population of a species that an environment can support. 4 factors that determine the carrying capacity: 1. materials and energy (energy, water, carbon, and other essential nutrients 2. food chains: the population size is limited by the size of the populations at lower trophic levels. (Prey are limited by their predators and their food supply). 3. competition: each organism has the same need as any other. They compete for resources such as food, water, mates, space. 4. density: depending on their size, environment and way of life, different species have different needs for space.

Competition: Two types of competition: 1. intraspecific: among members of the same species 2. interspecific: between different species

Density: Two types of density factors can limit population sizes. 1. density-dependent factors: these are factors that increase as the population gets bigger and then eventually lead to a decrease in the population size by increasing death rate and lowering birth rate. * overcrowding *parasites/disease *aggression amongst members * neglect of offspring

2. density-independent factors: can limit a population regardless of its original size. * forest fire * flood * volcano

Population Growth Since all organisms reproduce, populations tend to grow over time If unlimited resources are present, growth will be exponential It will increase very quickly for rapidly reproducing organisms and more slowly for slowly reproducing ones The curve will be a “J” curve or an exponential growth curve

Generation# of bacteriatime min 3430min 4845min 5161hr 63275min 76490min min 92562hrs hrs , , ,5364hrs 18131, , , ,048,5765hrs 222,097, ,194, ,388, ,777,2166hrs

Population Growth 2 Resources are never unlimited in real life! As population rises, resources decline. If the growth is too rapid, resources are rapidly depleted and a population crash can occur This pattern occurs often with many populations (including humans) Gypsy moth caterpillar

Population Growth 3 More often what happens is that the resources slowly decrease, the growth rate slowly decreases, and they meet. This results in an S - shaped curve This sustainable population number that they keep returning to is the carrying capacity of the environment for that particular organism

Predator Prey Populations Predator Prey Populations means that the two populations are linked- a change in one population causes a change in the other population.

The Rabbit - Wolf Example Year rabbit and 5 wolves- the wolves have lots of food so majority of their offspring survive Year rabbits and 15 wolves- many rabbits were eaten by the wolves and more young wolves survive. (This is the closest we get to a perfect system- wolves are fed and keeping the rabbit population in check.) Year rabbits and 25 wolves- not enough rabbits to feed the wolves. Rabbit population continues to drop and wolves begin to starve. Wolf population also drops. Year 4- Rabbit population begins to recover. Year 5- Whole process repeats again.

Rabbit - Wolf Populations As the population of rabbits grows, so does the population of wolves, until there are so many wolves that they overeat the rabbits, whereupon the wolf population begins to diminish. But once the wolf population diminishes, the rabbit population is able to begin growing again, and of course as it does so does the wolf population, in a cycle that never ends.

Human Growth Patterns What are the causes of the rapid growth of human populations? What are some possible consequences of this growth pattern? What will our future look like? (Remember the Reindeer?)

Succession… Changes in the structure of a community of organisms; the replacement of existing species by more recently arriving species.

Before After

Primary Succession : After a major disturbance such as an ice age, the rocks are bare, there isn’t even soil, so it is with great difficultly that the plants return and re-establish themselves.

Pioneer species: Pioneer species: the organisms that come first…they will establish themselves on bare rock and start to change the ecosystem!

Secondary Succession… This type of succession begins after a disturbance which doesn’t remove all of the vegetation. (Not down to the bare rocks) Examples: forest fires deforestation construction volcanos