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Characteristics of Populations

Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

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Page 1: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Characteristics of Populations

Page 2: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS

Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one

another in appearance, behaviour, chemistry and genetic makeup and that have the ability to interbreed with each other under natural conditions (produce viable offspring).

Page 3: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Population Size: the number of individuals of a species occupying a given area at a given time (ex. 700 Wood ducks in Elevator Bay) What is the population of humans in Canada? In

Ontario? In Toronto? In this grade 12 biology class?

Page 4: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

POPULATION DENSITY

Population Density (D) is calculated by dividing the population size or number of individuals (N) by the space occupied by that population (S).

D = N S

Page 5: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Population Density:China vs. Canada

Page 6: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Usually smaller organisms have much greater population densities than larger organisms. (Ex. 350 field mice per hectare in Algonquin Park vs. 0.8 moose per hectare)

Page 7: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

TYPES of DENSITY

Crude Density: number of individuals of the same species per total unit area or volume.

Ecological Density: number of individuals of the same species per useable unit area or volume.

D = N S or useable S

Page 8: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Sample Problem

If 480 moose live in a 600 hectare section of Algonquin Park, what is their crude density?

Page 9: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Solution

If 480 moose live in a 600 hectare section of Algonquin Park, what is their crude density?

# of moose = N = 480Area of space = 600 ha

Crude density = N/S= 480 moose / 600 ha= 0.8 moose / ha

Therefore the crude density is 0.8 moose /ha or approximately 1 moose/ha.

Page 10: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

What is their ecological density if that section of the park includes 800 000 m2 of open water which the moose do not use?

(1ha = 10,000 m2)

Page 11: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Solution What is their ecological density if that section of the park includes 800 000

m2 of open water which the moose do not use? (1ha = 10,000 m2)

N = 480 Unuseable Space = Area of open water, convert m2 to ha

800 000 m2 x 1 ha 10 000m2

=80 ha of unusable spaceUseable Space = 600 ha – 80 ha

= 520 ha

D = N/S = 480 moose / 520 ha= 0.92 moose / ha

Therefore the ecological density is 0.92 moose/ha or approximately 1 moose/ha.

Page 12: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

POPULATION DISPERSION

Population Dispersion is the pattern in which individuals are dispersed throughout a specific area. There are 3 general types:

Page 13: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

POPULATION DISPERSION

Clumped Dispersion: organisms are densely populated in areas of the habitat with favourable conditions for survival, usually around resources (most populations exhibit this...cattails growing at the edges of ponds, fish swimming in schools...)

Page 14: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

POPULATION DISPERSION continued...

Uniform Dispersion: individuals are evenly distributed throughout the habitat. Occurs when individuals set up territories (ie Penguins).

Page 15: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

POPULATION DISPERSION continued...

Random Dispersion: occurs when the habitat is particularly uniform and interactions with other members of the same species do not affect distribution. This is fairly rare in nature, ex.: some tropical trees.

Page 16: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

SAMPLING TECHNIQUES

It is rare that biologists can take an exact count of all the members in a population due to the size and/or range over which the population lives.

Instead biologists count a sample of the population and estimate the population size from this sample.

Page 17: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

QUADRAT SAMPLING

A common sampling technique for stationary populations is quadrat sampling.

A quadrat, or sampling frame, is placed in a region within the habitat and each member of the population of the species in question that appears in the frame is counted.

Page 18: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

The more quadrats used the more accurate the population density and population size measurements.

Page 19: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Equations

Average sample density = total number of individuals counted in sample/ total sample area

Estimated population size = average sample density X total size of study area.

ASD = sample N

sample Area

Estimated N total = ASD x total area

Page 20: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

MARK-RECAPTURE SAMPLING

A common sampling technique for mobile or dangerous populations is mark-recapture.

Biologists trap/tranquilize/catch a number of individuals of a population, mark them and then release them back into their habitat. A short time later they catch a second sample of the population and use the ratio of the marked recaptures to the unmarked captures to estimate the population size.

Page 21: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

Example

Page 22: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

MARK-RECAPTURE formula

Total # marked (M) = # of recaptures (m) population size (N) 2nd sample size (n)

Rearrange to solve for population size N = Mn m

M = mN n

Solving for

Page 23: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

The marking must not : harm the individual, prevent it from going about daily activities or make it more easily caught a second time.

Page 24: Characteristics of Populations. CHARACTERISTICS of POPULATIONS Habitat: the place where an organism lives Species: organisms that resemble one another

The accuracy of the mark-recapture method depends on certain assumptions: every organism in the population has an

equal chance of being captured, during the time between captures the

proportion of marked to unmarked remains unchanged,

and, the population size does not increase or decrease during the sampling study.