Chapter 4: Population Ecology. CHAPTER 4.1: POPULATION DYNAMICS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Understanding Populations
Advertisements

Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Population Dynamics.
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Chapter 3 Communities, Biomes, and Ecosystems
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
CH. 4 POPULATION ECOLOGY.
CH. 4 POPULATION ECOLOGY.
Ecology & Evolution. 7 billion people and growing.
Population Ecology.
Population Dynamics Limiting Factors Density Problems.
Population Ecology Chapter 4.1 Population Dynamics.
Population Ecology. Population Dynamics Population: All the individuals of a species that live together in an area.
Population Ecology. Population Dynamics Population: All the individuals of a species that live together in an area Demography: The statistical study of.
Population Dynamics (4.1)
Lecture 16 Population Dynamics Ozgur Unal
Why does the US Government conduct a census every 10 years?
Biology Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Biology Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Population Dynamics. describes how pop. Inc or D DD Dec. immigration birth emmigration death.
Population Dynamics (4.1)
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Population Dynamics – Growth Rates Chapter 4. Learning Targets I can… 1. Explain the concept of carrying capacity 2. Model how limiting factors and organism.
Chapter 4: Population Ecology Wood. 4.1 Population Dynamics I.Population Characteristics 92 II.Population-Limiting Factors 94 III.Population Growth Rates.
Click on a lesson name to select. Population Biology Lesson 6.
Population Ecology. Population Characteristics Population Density: –The number of organisms per unit area Spatial Distribution: –Dispersion: The pattern.
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.
Essential Questions What are the characteristics of populations and how they are distributed? What are the differences between density-independent and.
Population Ecology 4-1: Population Dynamics Populations are described as follows: Density Spatial distribution Growth rate Would an individual be considered.
Ch. 4 Population Ecology. Section 1--Essential Questions What are the characteristics of populations and how are they distributed? What are the differences.
Chapter 4: Population Ecology Essential Questions: EQ: How would changes in populations affect the flow of energy and matter in the ecosystem? EQ: How.
Population. 1.What are the characteristics of population? 2. population density – number of organisms per unit area 2. dispersion – the pattern of spacing.
Click on a lesson name to select. Population Density.
Populations are described by density, spatial distribution, and growth rate. Population Ecology.
The Distribution of Species. How are organisms distributed in these biomes? Why are organisms found in some biomes but not others? The answer to these.
Population Dynamics Part 2. Population Characteristics 1.Population Density: – The number of organisms per unit area 2.Spatial Distribution: – Dispersion:
Population Ecology.  Pop. Density  # organisms per unit area  Pop. Ranges  Areas occupied by a species  Spatial Distribution  Spacing pattern of.
Population Ecology. Population Dynamics Population: All the individuals of a species that live together in an area Demography: The statistical study of.
Section 1: Population Dynamics
Population Dynamics Biology I.
Chapter 4 – Population Ecology
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Chapter 4.1 Population Ecology. Chapter 4.1 Population Ecology.
Section 1: Population Dynamics
The number of organisms per unit area
Population Ecology.
Energy Flow and Populations
Population Dynamics (4.1)
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Chapter 4: Population Ecology
Population Dynamics Chapter 4 Section 1.
Population Characteristics
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Population Ecology Chapter 4.
Population Dynamics Chapter 4 Section 1.
Populations.
The number of _____________ per unit area
Population Ecology.
Chapter 4 Section 1.
The number of organisms per unit area
Population Dynamics Unit 4: The Biosphere
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Populations.
The number of organisms per unit area
Population Ecology.
Chapter 4 Population Ecology
Population Density The number of organisms per unit area
Population Density The number of organisms per unit area
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 4: Population Ecology

CHAPTER 4.1: POPULATION DYNAMICS

Population Density The number of organisms per unit area Spatial distribution Dispersion is the pattern of spacing of a population. Clumped, even, random

Population Density Limiting Factors There are two categories of limiting factors—density-independent factors and density-dependent factors.

Density-Independent Factors Any factor in the environment that does not depend on the number of members in a population per unit area Weather events Fire Human alterations of the landscape Air, land, and water pollution

Density-Dependent Factors Any factor in the environment that depends on the number of members in a population per unit area. Biotic Factors Disease Competition Parasites

Population Density Population Growth Rate The population growth rate (PGR) explains how fast a given population grows. The natality of a population is the birthrate in a given time period.

Exponential Growth Model Exponential growth occurs when the growth rate is proportional to the size of the population. All populations grow exponentially until some limiting factor slows the population’s growth.

Logistic Growth Model The population’s growth slows or stops following exponential growth, at the population’s carrying capacity.

Carrying Capacity The maximum number of individuals in a species that an environment can support for the long term is the carrying capacity. Carrying capacity is limited by the energy, water, oxygen, and nutrients available.

Rate Strategy The rate strategy, or r-strategy, is an adaptation for living in an environment where fluctuation in biotic or abiotic factors occur An r-strategist is generally a small organism Short life span Produces many offspring

Carrying-Capacity Strategy The carrying-capacity strategy, or k- strategy, is an adaptation for living in stable environments A k-strategist is generally a larger organism Long life span Produces few offspring

CHAPTER 4.2: HUMAN POPULATION

Human Population Growth The study of human population size, density, distribution, movement, and birth and death rates is demography. Increase in population due to agriculture, domestication of animals, improvements in shelter, technological advances and medicine have increased the human population carrying capacity

Zero Population Growth Zero population growth (ZPG) occurs when the birthrate equals the death rate

Negative-Growth Population Trend When the population is decreasing Death rates exceeds birthrates  Ex: Too few workers to support an aging population

Human Carrying Capacity Scientists are concerned about the human population reaching or exceeding the carrying capacity. An important factor is the amount of resources from the biosphere that are used by each person.