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Population: a group of members of the same species living in an area
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Community: populations of different species living together in an area
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Population growth: change in population
• Equilibrium: births + immigration are equal to deaths + emigration
• Often, population growth is not zero
(Births + Immigration) – (Deaths + Emigration) = Change in population number
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Population growth rate: amount the population has
changed divided by the time it had to change
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Population growth curves: graph how populations grow;
used to find:
• How fast a population could grow
• How many individuals there are now
• What the future population size could be
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Constant growth: adds a constant number of individuals
over each time period
Calculated as the population number at the start + (A constant * Time) = Population number at the end
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Exponential growth: each species can increase its population two fold in each growth period |
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Logistic growth: some process slows growth so it levels off near carrying capacity (population grows and then levels off)
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Carrying capacity (K): the maximum population of a species that a given habitat can support without being degraded
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Logistic growth: some process slows growth so it levels off near carrying capacity (population grows and then levels off)
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Density Dependent Population Growth |
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Density dependent population growth-depends on the # of individuals at a given point in time
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Biotic potential: the number of offspring (live births, eggs, or plant seeds and spores) produced under ideal situations
• Measured by r (the rate at which organisms reproduce)
• Varies tremendously from less than 1 birth/year (some mammals) to millions/year (plants, invertebrates)
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Recruitment: survival through early growth stages to become part of the breeding population
• Young must survive and reproduce to have any effect on population size
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Life history: the progression of changes in an organism’s life that focuses on reproduction (passing on your genes to your offspring
• Age at first reproduction, length of life, etc.
• Visualized in a survivorship graph
• Type I survivorship: low mortality in early life
• Most people survive (e.g., humans)
• Type III survivorship: many offspring that die young
• Few live to the end of their life (oysters, dandelions)
• Type II survivorship: intermediate survivorship pattern (squirrels, coral)
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Environmental resistance: the biotic and abiotic factors that may limit a population’s increase
• Biotic: predators, parasites, competitors, lack of food
• Abiotic: unusual temperatures, moisture, light, salinity, pH, lack of nutrients, fire
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r-strategists (r-selected species): produce lots of young, but leave their survival to nature (Type III)
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Life history traits: are any characteristic that helps a species overcome environmental stress and reproduce
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K-strategists (K-selected species): lower biotic potential (Type 1)
• Care for and protect young
• Live in a stable environment already populated by the species
• Larger, longer lived, well-adapted to normal environmental fluctuations
• Their populations fluctuate around carrying capacity
• For example, elephant, California condor
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Predation: one benefits, the other is harmed (+−)
• Includes parasitism, herbivory
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Competition: both species are harmed (−−)
• Interspecific competition: between different species
• Intraspecific competition: between the same species
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Mutualism: both species benefit (++) |
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Commensalism: One species benefits, the other is not affected (+0) |
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Predator: the organism that does the feeding |
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Prey: the organism that is fed upon |
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Parasite: an organism (plant or animal) that feeds on its “prey,” usually without killing it
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Host: the organism that is being fed upon |
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Keystone species: are species that if removed creates a cascade of effects (usually predators)
• Impacting far more than just the other species they interact with
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Niche: the position of a population or species within its ecosystem and describes how an organism or population respond to the distribution of resources and competitors
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Intraspecific Competition |
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Intraspecific competition: competition between members of the same species
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Territory: an area defended by an individual or group |
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Amensalism: one species is harmed; the other is unaffected |
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Resource partitioning: the division of a resource and specialization in different parts of it
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