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11 Population Dynamics Chapter 10 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

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Presentation on theme: "11 Population Dynamics Chapter 10 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display."— Presentation transcript:

1 11 Population Dynamics Chapter 10 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

2 22 Dispersal Africanized Honeybees – Honeybees (Apis melifera) evolved in Africa and Europe and have since differentiated into many locally adapted subspecies. Africanized honeybees disperse much faster than European honeybees. – Within 30 years they occupied most of South America, Mexico, and all of Central America.

3 33 Africanized Honeybees http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =e7fUXw-5T2Q

4 44 Collared Doves

5 55 Rapid Changes in Response to…

6 66 Rapid Changes in Response to Climate Change Organisms began to spread northward about 16,000 years ago following retreat of glaciers and warming climate. – Evidence found in preserved pollen in lake sediments. – Movement rate 100 - 400 m/yr.

7 77

8 88 Dispersal in Response to Changing Food Supply Holling observed numerical responses to increased prey availability. – Increased prey density led to increased density of predators. Individuals move into new areas in response to higher prey densities.

9 99 Dispersal in Rivers and Streams Stream dwellers have mechanisms to allow them to maintain their stream position. – Streamlined bodies – Bottom-dwelling – Adhesion to surfaces Tend to get washed downstream in spates. – Muller hypothesized populations maintained via dynamic interplay between downstream and upstream dispersal. Colonization cycle

10 10 Dispersal in Rivers and Streams

11 11 Metapopulations A metapopulation is made up of a group of subpopulations living on patches of habitat connected by an exchange of individuals. – Alpine Butterfly - Roland et al. – Lesser Kestrels - Serrano and Tella.

12 12 Patterns of Survival Three main methods of estimation: – Identify individuals born at same time and keep records from birth. – Record age at death of individuals. – Calculate difference in proportion of individuals in each age class. Assumes differences from mortality.

13 13 High Survival Among the Young Murie collected Dall Sheep skulls, Ovis dalli. – Major Assumption: Proportion of skulls in each age class represented typical proportion of individuals dying at that age. Reasonable given sample size of 608. – Constructed _________________________. Discovered bi-modal mortality. – <1 yr. – 9-13 yrs.

14 14 Survivorship Curves : Majority of mortality occurs among older individuals. – Dall Sheep : Constant rate of survival throughout lifetime. – American Robins : High mortality among young, followed by high survivorship. – Sea Turtles

15 15 Survivorship Curves

16 16 Age Distribution Age distribution of a population reflects its history of survival, reproduction, and growth potential. Miller published data on age distribution of white oak (Quercus alba). – Determined relationship between age and trunk diameter. – Age distribution biased towards young trees. Sufficient reproduction for replacement. – Stable population

17 17 Age Distribution

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19 19 Age Distribution Rio Grande Cottonwood populations (Populus deltoides wislizenii) are declining. – Old trees not being replaced. – Reproduction depends on seasonal floods. Prepare seed bed. Keep nursery areas moist. – Because floods are absent, there are now fewer germination areas.

20 20 Rates of Population Change : Number of young born per female. : Tabulation of birth rates for females of different ages.

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22 22 Dynamic Population in a Variable Climate Grant and Grant studied Galapagos Finches. – Drought in 1977 resulted in no recruitment. Gap in age distribution. Additional droughts in 1984 and 1985. Reproductive output driven by exceptional year in 1983. – Responsiveness of population age structure to environmental variation.

23 23 Estimating Rates for an Annual Plant P. drummondii – R o = Net reproductive rate; Average number of seeds produced by an individual in a population during its lifetime. – R o = Σ l x m x X= Age interval in days. l x = % pop. surviving to each age (x). m x = Average number seeds produced by each individual in each age category.

24 24 Estimating Rates for an Annual Plant Because P. drummondii has non-overlapping generations, can estimate growth rate. – Geometric Rate of Increase (λ): λ=N t+1 / N t N t+1 = Size of population at future time. N t = Size of population at some earlier time.

25 25 Estimating Rates when Generations Overlap Common Mud Turtle (K. subrubrum) – About half turtles nest each year. – Average generation time: T = Σ xl x m x / R o – X= Age in years – Per Capita Rate of Increase: r = ln R o / T – ln = Base natural logarithms

26 26 Collared Doves Collared Doves, Streptopelia decaocto, spread from Turkey into Europe after 1900. – Dispersal began suddenly. Not influenced by humans. Took place in small jumps. – 45 km/yr


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