Important words and concepts from Chapter 52, Campbell & Reece, 2002 (3/25/2005):

by Stephen T. Abedon (abedon.1@osu.edu) for Biology 113 at the Ohio State University

 

 

Course-external links are in brackets

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Vocabulary words are found below

 

 

Consider putting in an annotated sigmoid growth curve somewhere in this lecture (e.g., like the overhead I use)

Consider breaking up discussion of fecundity into a number of offspring component and a generation time component

 

(1) Chapter title: Population Ecology

(a)                    [population ecology (Google Search)] [index]

(2) Population ecology

(a)                    Population ecology studies organisms from the point of view of the size and structure of their populations

(b)                    A population ecologist studies the interaction of organisms with their environments by measuring properties of populations rather than the behavior of individual organisms

(c)                    Properties of populations include

(i)                      Population size (size)

(ii)                    Population density (density)

(iii)                   Patterns of dispersion (dispersion)

(iv)                  Demographics (demographics)

(v)                    Population growth (growth)

(vi)                  Limits on population growth (limits)

(d)                    Note that all of these properties are not those of individual organisms but instead are properties which exist only if one considers more than one organism at any given time, or over a period of time (i.e., they are emergent properties)

(e)                    "The characteristics of a population are shaped by the interactions between individuals and their environments on both ecological and evolutionary time scales, and natural selection can modify these characteristics in a population."

(f)                      Thus, population ecology also goes beyond consideration of just population parameters and additionally considers how the characteristics of individual organisms impact on population parameters

(g)                    [population ecology (Google Search)] [index]

 

POPULATION PROPERTIES

 

(3) Population

(a)                    A population in an ecological sense is a group of organisms, of the same species, which roughly occupy the same geographical area at the same time

(b)                    Individual members of the same population can either interact directly, or may interact with the dispersing progeny of other members of the same population (e.g., pollen)

(c)                    Population members interact with a similar environment and experience similar environmental limitations

(d)                    [population (Google Search)] [index]

(4) Population size

(a)                    A population's size depends on how the population is defined

(b)                    If a population is defined in terms of some degree of reproductive isolation, then that population's size is the size of its gene pool

(c)                    If a population is defined in terms of some geographical range, then that population's size is the number of individuals living in the defined area

(d)                    Ecologists typically are more concerned with the latter means of defining a population since this is both easier to do and is a more practical measure if one is interested in determining the impact of a given population on a given ecosystem, or vice versa

(e)                    “Although we can determine an average population size for many species, the average is often of less interest than the year-to-year or place-to-place trend in numbers.” (p. 1166, Campbell & Reece, 2002)

(f)                      [population size, "population size" and "population ecology" (Google Search)] [index]

(5) Population density

(a)                    Given that a population is defined in terms of some natural or arbitrarily defined geographical range, then population density may be defined as simply the number of individual organisms per unit area

(b)                    Different species, of course, exist at different densities in their environments, and the same species may be able to achieve one density in one environment and another in a different environment

(c)                    Population densities may additionally be determined in terms of some measure other than population size per unit area such as population mass per unit area

(d)                    [population density, "population density" and "population ecology" (Google Search)] [index]

(6) Patterns of dispersion

(a)                    Individual members of populations may be distributed over a geographical area in a number of different ways including

(i)                      Clumped distribution (attraction)

(ii)                    Uniform distribution (repulsion)

(iii)                   Random distribution (minimal interaction/influence)

(b)                    See Figure 52.2, Patterns of dispersion within a population’s geographical range

(c)                    Clumping may result either from individual organisms being attracted to each other, or individual organisms being attracted more to some patches within a range than they are to other patches; the net effect is that some parts of the range will have a large number of individuals whereas others will contain few or none

(d)                    A uniform distribution means that approximately the same distance may be found between individual organisms; uniform distributions result from individual organisms actively repelling each other

(e)                    A random distribution means that where individual organisms are found is only minimally influenced by interactions with other members of the same population, and random distributions are uncommon; "Random spacing occurs in the absence of strong attractions or repulsions among individuals of a population."

(f)                      Note that both clumping and uniform distributions suggest that individual organisms are either interacting with one another (actively seeking each other out or actively avoiding each other), or are all competing with one another for the same limited resources, regardless of the overall population density (as in the case of clumping which results from geographical patchiness)

(g)                    [patterns of disperson (Google Search)] [index]

 

DEMOGRAPHICS

 

(7) Demographics

(a)                    A population's demographics are its vital statistics, particularly those statistics which can impact on present and future population size

(b)                    Two statistics that are of particular import are a population's age structure and a population's sex ratio

(c)                    Additional considerations (in human populations and for example) are considered to the right à

(d)                    [demographics (Google Search)] [Center for Demography and Ecology] [index]

(8) Age structure

(a)                    Age structure refers to the size of cohorts within a population

(b)                    Parameters related to age structure include

(i)                      Fecundity (birth rate)

(ii)                    Generation time

(iii)                   Death rate

(c)                    See Figure 52.22, Age structure pyramids for the human population of Kenya (growing at 2.1% per year), the United States (growing at 0.6% per year), and Italy (zero growth) for 1995

(d)                    Below is the actual and predicted age structure the Dutch civil service in 2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015:

(e)                   

(f)                      [age structure (Google Search)] [index]

(9) Cohort

(a)                    A cohort is a group of individuals all of whom have the same age

(b)                    In a typical population, the size of cohorts will vary with age

(c)                    For example, in a typical population, younger cohorts will be larger (i.e., more individuals per cohort) than older cohorts, all else being equal

(10) Fecundity [birth rate]

(a)                    Fecundity refers to the average birth rate associated with a population

(b)                    The greater a population's fecundity, all else held constant, the faster a population will increase in size

(c)                    Note that fecundity typically varies with the age of individuals

(d)                    [fecundity, birth rate (Google Search)] [index]

(11) Generation time

(a)                    Generation time is simply the average span between the birth of individuals and the birth of their offspring

(b)                    "Other factors being equal, a shorter generation time will result in faster population growth."

(c)                    Note that species which are capable of reproducing more than once will display an overlapping of generations which basically means that parental cohorts and progeny cohorts can be alive (and potentially competing with one another) at the same time

(d)                    Note that another way of saying this is that when life expectancies exceed the minimum time between generations, generations will overlap

(e)                    [generation time (Google Search)] [index]

(12) Death rate

(a)                    Death rate is the rate at which individuals of a certain age die

(b)                    Note that death rates often vary with age with either the very young or the very old displaying the greatest death rates

(c)                    Note additionally that population growth occurs when overall birth rates exceed overall death rates

(d)                    [death rate, "death rate" and "population ecology" (Google Search)] [index]

(13) Sex ratio

(a)                    More often than not the rate at which a population may grow is dependent on the sex ratio in the population; the fewer females, the slower the rate of population growth

(b)                    This, of course, is because uteruses are limiting and males often can inseminate more than one female

(c)                    This generalization falls apart, however, when males are limited in their ability to inseminate more than one female, or when males contribute significantly to the raising of offspring

(d)                    Below are sex ratios (New South Wales) as they vary with age (units on y axis are in living males per 100 females):

(e)                   

(f)                      [sex ratios, "sex ratios" and "population ecology" (Google Search)] [index]

 

SURVIVORSHIP CURVES

 

(14) Survivorship curves

(a)                    Observing age structure graphically can provide insights into a species' (or a population's) ecology

(b)                    Survivorship curves graph cohort size against relative age

(c)                    See Figure 52.3, Idealized survivorship curves

(d)                    The typical survivorship curve shows cohort size declining with age

(e)                    There exist three general types of survivorship curves

(i)                      Type I

(ii)                    Type II

(iii)                   Type III

(f)                       Note in the following survivorship curves that the y axis is logarithmic!!!

(g)                    

(h)                    [survivorship curves (Google Search)] [index]

(15) Type II survivorship curves

(a)                    The simplest type of decline is exponential, i.e., the death rate for every cohort is the same

(b)                    These survivorship curves graph as a straight line on semi-logarithmic graph paper (i.e., as presented in a typical survivorship curve)

(c)                    The individuals in populations that display a type II curve are those that both do not age and are born as fully fit as adults, e.g., hydra

(d)                    Individuals are lost in these populations mostly to accidents and predation

(e)                    [(Google Search)] [index]

(16) Type I survivorship curves

(a)                    Because individuals tend to die exponentially due to accidents or predation, it often is a good strategy to reproduce relatively early in a life span rather than relatively late

(i)                      That way individuals achieve reproduction while they still have a reasonable likelihood of being alive

(ii)                    This is assuming, of course, that the goal is a Darwinian one, i.e., maximizing one's reproductive output

(iii)                   Note that how such a strategy works is complicated if individual fecundity increases with age

(b)                    Very often for a given species there will be some age at which individuals are maximally fecund

(c)                    Species that combine maximum fecundity with early ages typically do so at the expense of their ability to survive long periods (i.e., this is an example of the principle of allocation)

(d)                    A survivorship curve of such individuals may display a relatively shallow slope while individuals are younger (i.e., maximally robust and maximally reproductive) but then show an abrupt increase in death rate at ages that are coincident to declines in fecundity

(e)                    Humans, of course, have a type I survivorship curve; evolution makes us get married young and have lots of babies before a saber toothed tiger comes along and picks us off, i.e., à

(f)                      [(Google Search)] [index]

(17) Type III survivorship curves

(a)                    The other side of the survivorship coin is the degree of investment in individual progeny

(b)                    Some organisms invest a great deal in each offspring and those organisms are (ideally at least) rewarded with relatively high survivorship at early ages

(c)                    Other organisms invest little in individual offspring, and display very low early-age survivorship (which they make up for by producing buckets of offspring)

(d)                    Organisms that produce large numbers of cheap progeny and which display minimal declines in fecundity with age, if they survive their youth, display type III survivorship curves

(e)                    Examples include sea turtles and trees

(f)                      That is, type III survivorship species have a very large rate of mortality when young, but should they survive their youth, they put significant energy into continued survival since the longer they survive, the more progeny they will produce

(g)                    [(Google Search)] [index]

 

LIFE HISTORIES

 

(18) Life history

(a)                    “The traits that affect an organism’s schedule of reproduction and survival (from birth through reproduction to death) make up its life history.” (p. 1156, Campbell & Reece, 2002)

(b)                    The study of life history characteristics is the detailed study of those ecological and evolutionary parameters that impact on survivorship curves

(c)                    "In many cases there are trade-offs between survival and traits such as clutch size (number of offspring per reproductive episode), frequency of reproduction, and investment in parental care. The traits that affect an organism's schedule of reproduction and death make up its life history. Of course, a particular life history pattern, like most characteristics of an organism, is the result of natural selection operating over evolutionary time."

(d)                    In other words, the Darwinian goal is to maximize lifetime reproductive output, and this can be achieved by having babies more rapidly or living longer, or some combination of the two, as well as by varying many additional details having to do with survival and reproduction

(e)                    However, different combinations of these life history parameters will result in organisms producing different numbers of surviving offspring—evolution will tend to maximize the representation in a population of those individuals who display those combinations of life history traits that maximize the number of surviving progeny they produce

(f)                      [life history (Google Search)] [index]