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MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology

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Page 1: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

MRS. BENJAMIN

Population Ecology

Page 2: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

1. What two countries contain the largest human populations?

a. United States & Chinab. India & United Statesc. China & Indiad. Australia & China

Page 3: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

2. The current world population is approximately

a. 6,900,000,000b. 9,000,000,000c. 5,000,000,000

Page 4: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

3. According to this graph of Finland’s population, which is true?

a. The largest portion of the population are males and females between the ages 40-44.

b. The largest portion of the population are males and females between the ages of 60-64.

c. The largest portion of the population are males and females between the ages of 15-19.

Page 5: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

4. According to this graph at what age are there the least males?

a. 75-79b. 40-44c. 20-24

Page 6: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

5. According to this graph of the Afghanistan population which age group has the most number of males and females?

a. 45-49b. 20-24c. 5-9

Page 7: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

6. According to this graph the birth rates in Sudan are

a. increasingb. decreasingc. staying the same

Page 8: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Population Ecology

The study of how plant and animal populations within a community affect each other.

Can be affected by the attributes of density, age, population growth, competition, and predation.

Image: http://www.bitbetter.com/?xc=MC900078708

Page 9: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Population Density

The measure of how crowded organisms are in their environment.

Because organisms compete for resources, keeping a balance is important.

If the population is too high, some organisms will die.

Page 10: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Limiting Factors

Density-dependentDependent on the population size.

Density-independentAffect the same percentage of a

population regardless of population size.

Page 11: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Density-dependent limiting factors

Related to competition and other interactions between organisms.

Density-Dependent limiting factors include: Food supply Predation Disease

As population grows each factor acts more strongly to limit growth (helps control growth)

Page 12: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

These limit growth of population density by changing or destroying the habitat.

Examples include: Natural disasters such as

Hurricanes Fires Floods

These can cause dramatic fluctuations in population size but they do not regulate size.

Density-independent limiting factors

Page 13: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Three groups of ages: Pre-reproductive Reproductive Post-reproductive.

Pre-reproductive organisms are young and have not reproduced.

IMAGE: MICROSOFT CLIP ART

Population Age

Page 14: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Reproductive organisms are in the process of reproducing

Post-reproductive organisms are past the stage of reproducing.

To be productive, a community should contain each of these three age groups.

Images: Microsoft clip art

Population Age

Page 15: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Determined by immigration, emigration, natality, and mortality.

Image: http://www.istockphoto.com/microsoftclipartimages.php?xc=MP910221037

Population Growth

Page 16: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Emigration is the act of an organism moving out of a habitat.

Immigration is the act of an organism moving into a habitat.

Image: Microsoft clip art

Population Growth

Page 17: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Population Growth

Natality is the production of new individuals in a habitat.

Mortality is the death rate in a population.

Page 18: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

A population grows at a rate in which each generation is a multiple of previous generation.

All populations if given the perfect environment has the potential to increase exponentially.

However, reality is that resources are limited thus and exponential growth can only happen for short periods.

Exponential Growth

Page 19: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Exponential Growth

In reality what usually happens is known as a “boom and burst curve.”

The organism grows exponentially while conditions are good but then collapses when the conditions change.

Usually populations follow this pattern are density-independent populations.

This happens a lot with insects due to climate or rainfall.

Page 20: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Growth that occurs slowly and stops following a period of exponential growth

Usually populations controlled by density-dependent factors.

Generally an S-shaped curve on a graph

Plateaus and usually stabilizes at carrying capacity

Logistic Growth

Page 21: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

The number of individuals which a species can support within an ecosystem.

Generally as a organism reaches its carrying capacity it levels off and stops growing creating an S-shaped curve.

Carrying capacity

Page 22: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Exponential & Logistic Growthhttp://www.bio.georgiasouthern.edu/Bio-home/George-Sophie/Ecologyquestions.html

Page 23: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

The use of the same resources by different organisms to live.

Population ecology can also be affected by competition. All resources are limited in supply. Because of this, some organisms will die or will be

forced to move to other communities to survive.

Image: Microsoft clip art

Competition

Page 24: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

One living organism serving as food for another organism.

The organism that consumes another is called a predator, the organism being consumed is called the prey.

Image: http://www.nvtofficeclips.com/microsoft/?xc=MC900444848

Predation

Page 25: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Cannibalism, or the eating of your own kind, is also considered predation.

An example of cannibalism is the female praying mantis eating the male during mating.

Image: Microsoft clip art

Predation

Page 26: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

All organisms are encountered with changes in their external environment.

Failure to change may cause elimination of the species.

The ability for an organism to change with their environment is called adaptation.

Image: http://marketplace.veer.com/officeonline/?xc=MP900448006

External Environment

Page 27: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

The ability to change with environment is called adaptation.

An example of adaptation is homeostasis.

Adaptation

Page 29: MRS. BENJAMIN Population Ecology. 1. What two countries contain the largest human populations? a. United States & China b. India & United States c. China

Carter, J. (2004). Protista. Retrieved January 31, 2011 from http://biology.clc.uc.edu/courses/bio106/protista.htm,

DuBay, D., Tweed, A., Schoch, R., & Lapinski, A. (1999). Ecological Interactions. Environmental Science. Addison Wesley Longman Inc. United States of America. 50-88.

Illinois State Core Curriculum

Postlethwait, J., & Hopson, J. (2006). Ecology. Modern Biology. Holt, Rinehart and Winsten. Austin, Texas. 358-379.

Prentiss, D. What is a biomass pyramid? University of California. Retrieved on January 31, 2011 from http://earth.rice.edu/mtpe/bio/biosphere/topics/energy/40_biomass.html

Ricklefs. R. (2008). The Economy of Nature. W.H. Freeman and Company. New York. 4-15.

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