44

Population Ecology

Chapter Outline

Population Ecology

44.1 a honking mess

44.2 Population Demographics

Population Size

Population Density and Distribution

Clumped Distribution

Near-Uniform Distribution

Random Distribution

Age Structure

Effects of Scale and Timing

44.3 Population Size and Exponential Growth

Immigration and Emigration

Zero to Exponential Growth

Biotic Potential

44.4 Limits on Population Growth

Density-Dependent Factors

Logistic Growth

Density-Independent Factors

44.5 Life History Patterns

Quantifying Life History Traits

Environmental Effects on Life History

44.6 effects of predation on life history

A Long-Term Study of Guppies

Overfishing of Atlantic Cod

44.7 Human Population Growth

Early Innovations and Expansions

From the Industrial Revolution Onward

44.8 anticipated growth and consumption

Fertility and Age Structure

A Demographic Transition

Resource Consumption

A honking mess (revisited)

Summary

Self-Quiz

Data Analysis activities

Critical Thinking

Population Ecology

Learning Objectives

44.1 Examine the threats that a growing population of Canada geese pose to humans.

44.2 Examine the different characteristics that are used to describe a population.

44.3 Discuss the factors that determine the size of a population and its growth rate.

44.4 Determine the environmental limits on population growth.

44.5 Discuss how ecologists study life history patterns of different species.

44.6 Discuss how predation affects life history traits.

44.7 Examine the factors responsible for the rapid increase in human population size.

44.8 Determine the factors that will affect future changes in the human population.

Key Terms

Population Ecology

biotic potential

carrying capacity

cohort

demographic

demographic transition model

density-dependent limiting factors

density-independent limiting factors

ecological footprint

ecology

emigration

exponential growth

immigration

intraspecific competition

k-selection

life history pattern

logistic growth

mark-recapture sampling

per capita growth rate

plot sampling

population

population density

population distribution

population size

reproductive base

r-selection

survivorship curve

total fertility rate

zero population growth

Population Ecology

Lecture Outline

44.1 A Honking Mess

A. The Canadian geese population in the U.S. is increasing.

1. These geese are often distasteful to humans because their feces contaminate lakes and

grassy areas.

2. Geese have been known to cause airplane accidents by causing engine failure.

B. Many Canadian geese still migrate to Canada, but non-migratory birds are becoming more

prevalent.

1.  The non-migratory birds save energy by not traveling and can devote more energy to

reproduction.

2.  Researchers are looking for ways to limit the non-migratory geese populations without harming the migratory birds.

44.2 Population Demographics

A. Population Size

1. Population size is defined by the number of individuals in a population.

2. Since it is difficult to count all individuals in a population, different methods are used.

a. Plot sampling involves dividing an area into a grid, sampling the animals in several

plots on the grid, and multiplying to determine the approximate number in the

population.

b. The mark-recapture method begins by having some representatives of the population

tagged.

1)  The portion of marked animals in the second sample is taken to be

representative of those marked in the whole population.

B. Population Density and Distribution

1. Population density is the number of individuals per unit area or volume.

2. Population distribution describes the location of individuals relative to one another.

a. In clumped distribution, the density of the animals is arranged in clumps, possibly

because of patchy resources.

b. In near-uniform distribution, the organisms are fairly evenly placed in the

environment.

c. A random distribution pattern is one in which the individuals have no uniformity in their placement.

C. Age Structure

1. An age structure lists the number of individuals in each age category.

a. Those in the pre-reproductive category are considered the reproductive base.

D. Effects of Scale and Timing

1. Factors such as the scale of the sampling area and the timing of the study may impact the

information concerning a population’s size.

44.3 Population Size and Exponential Growth

A. Immigration and Emigration

1. Members of a population may leave (emigration) or enter a new population

(immigration).

B. Zero to Exponential Growth

1. When zero population growth occurs, it means that the number of individuals born

is equal to the number dying.

2. The per-capita growth rate equals the birth rate minus the death rate.

a. If the per-capita growth rate is more than zero, the population is exhibiting

exponential growth.

b. A J-shaped curve represents a population undergoing exponential growth.

C. The term biotic potential indicates the largest amount of increase that can occur in that particular population.

44.4 Limits on Population Growth

A. Density-Dependent Factors

Density-dependent factors are those that become more critical as the population increases.

a. Examples of density-dependent factors are food, water, and incidence of disease.

B. Logistic Growth

1. The carrying capacity is the largest number of individuals that a certain environment can

support.

a.  An S-shaped curve, representing logistic growth, is indicative of how a population

naturally changes.

C. Density-Independent Factors

1. Density-independent factors are those that are not influenced by the size of the population.

a. Examples of density-independent factors are floods, fires, and earthquakes.

44.5 Life History Patterns

A. Quantifying Life History Traits

1. Life tables illustrate the number of individuals that survive in various age categories.

a. This involves the focusing on a cohort, a group of individuals born during the same

interval.

2.  A survivorship curve is a visual representation of the age-specific survival of a

population.

a. A type I curve shows that the individuals usually survive until old age.

1) Animals exhibiting a type I curve produce a small amount of offspring that

require much care, e.g., humans.

b. A type II curve illustrates that the survival rate does not relate to age, e.g., squirrels.

c. A type III curve shows that the majority of the individuals do not survive to

maturity.

1)  Animals exhibiting a type III curve produce many offspring that do not require

much care, e.g., sea urchins.

B. Environmental Effects on Life History

1. A life history pattern is defined as how an organism allocates its resources between growth, maintenance, and reproduction in its lifetime.

a. An r-selected species is one with many offspring needing little care.

1)  These animals tend to be small, have a short lifespan, and may be killed off due to density-independent factors.

b. K-selected species produce few offspring that need much care.

1) These animals are usually larger and populations, controlled by density-

dependent factors, can approach the carrying factor.

44.6 Effects of Predation on Life History

A. A Long-Term Study of Guppies

1. Life history traits can change as a response to an alteration in the types of predators.

a. An example of this was shown by two isolated populations of guppies where there

were different predators.

1)  As a result of the studies, it was concluded that differences between guppies

preyed upon by different predators was genetic.

B. Overfishing of Atlantic Cod

1. The life history of the cod population in the North Atlantic changed due to over-fishing.

a. Because of the overfishing, the cod population began to reproduce earlier.

44.7 Human Population Growth

A. The human population’s rate of increase is largely due to migration into new climate zones, new technologies that increased the carrying capacity, and the elimination of some limiting factors.

B. Early Innovations and Expansions

1. This rate of growth is due to the fact that humans can spread easily into new habitat.

a. Man has developed fire and tool-making abilities that are passed on from one generation to the next.

2. Humans have developed new technologies to increase the carrying capacity of the environment.

a. Man learned how to cultivate crops, raise livestock.

C. From the Industrial Revolution Onward

1. Since the 1800s, the human population has increased dramatically.

2. The human population has learned how to overcome some limiting factors.

a. Man learned how to combat many diseases and use fossil fuels for energy production.

b. Fertilizers and pesticides improved agriculture.

c. Improvements in nutrition, sanitation, and medicine also had a large impact.

3. It is estimated that the population on Earth will reach nine billion by 2050.

44.8 Anticipated Growth and Consumption

A. Fertility and Age Structure

1. The average number of children born to each woman of reproductive age is the total

fertility rate.

a. The fertility rate worldwide has decreased from 6.5 to 2.6 in the last 50 years.

b. This decrease still puts the worldwide fertility rate above the number that keeps the population at a constant level.

c. The replacement fertility rate is the average number of children a woman has before she replaces herself with a daughter who reaches reproductive age successfully.

d. Approximately 1.9 billion people are approaching reproductive age.

B. The demographic transition model connects industrial development and changes in population growth rates.

1. In countries where industrialization has not yet occurred, the birth rate is high.

a. Children are needed to perform duties on a farm, e.g., many African countries.

2. In industrialized nations, the birth rate declines, e.g., United States.

a. Industrialized nations use a larger percentage of resources of the world.

3. In post-industrialized nations, the population size may decrease.

C. Resource Consumption

1. The term ecological footprint refers to the amount of the Earth’s surface that is needed to support a level of development and consumption in a sustainable fashion.

a. The U.S.’s ecological footprint is three times higher than other world residents and

nine times higher than a typical Indian citizen.

b.  As other less-developed nations progress, we may not have enough land to sustain

the Earth’s population.

44.9 A Honking Mess (Revisited)

A.  In 2009, a plane landed successfully on the Hudson River after the engines were damaged by geese.

1.  The DNA from the geese remnants obtained from the engines proved that they were from Canada, not New York.

Population Ecology