Quantitative Ecology Chap 12
Quantitative Ecology Chap 12
Quantitative Ecology Chap 12
Quantitative ecology
Quantitative ecology
Outline Population ecology Population dispersion Biotic potential Factors influencing population growth Life history patterns
Population ecology
population consists of the individuals of a species that occur together at one place at one time three important aspects of population i. the range throughout which a population occurs ii. dispersion of individuals within that range iii. size of the population attains Population distributions most species have relatively limited geographic range
Population dispersion
Randomly spaced not common in nature individuals do not interact strongly one another Uniformly spaced always results from competition for resources in animals, it occurs because individuals tend to defend their territories which provide them resources among plants, results of competition for the sunlight, nutrients or water
Population dispersion
Biotic potential
to understand populations, we must consider how they grow and factors in nature limit population growth The exponential growth model the actual rate of population increase r = (b-d) + (i-e) r = difference between the birthrate (b) and death rate (d)
e = movement out of area and i = movement into area
Biotic potential
biotic potential = rate at which a population of a given species will increases when no limits are placed on its rate of growth dN/dt = riN , N = num. of individuals in population,
dN/dt = rate of change in its num. over time ri = innate capacity for growth
Biotic potential
Carrying capacity how rapidly population grows, they will reach limit imposed by several factors such as space, light, water.. carrying capacity, K = maximum number of individuals that environment can support
Biotic potential
Logistic growth model as population reaches its carrying capacity, its rate of growth slows greatly because lack of resources dN/dt = rN(K-N/K) as N increases, the fraction by r is multiplied becomes smaller, and the rate population increases decline in many cases, real population display trends corresponding to a logistic growth curve
Survivorship curves
1 1
2 3
Population pyramids
1 1