Ch 53 - Population Ecology Flashcards
1
Q
Describe dispersion patterns.
A
- Describes how individuals are distributed
- Depends on environmental patchiness, social interactions, and dispersal ability.
- Clumped: based on resource availability & social behavior, most common pattern
- Uniform: evenly spaced based on agonistic (combative) social behavior, a result of territoriality or limited resoruces
- Random: unpredictible spacing, presnent in homogenous environements with little to no social interactions
2
Q
Describe life tables and reproductive tables.
A
- Life tables describe age specific survival patterns, studied in cohorts
- Reproductive tables are age-specific summaries of reproductive rates
3
Q
Describe survivorship curves.
A
- A graphical represenattion of life tables
- Type I species: “late loss”
- few, large offspring with parental care
- Reproduce when older
- Type II species: “constant loss”
- very common
- Type III species: “early loss”
- many offspring, little or no parental care, reproduce when younger
4
Q
Describe semelparity vs. iteroparity.
A
- Semelparity is the one-time production of many offspring, occurs in variable or unpredictable environments
- Iteroparity is the regular production of fewer offspring, occurs in stable environments
5
Q
Describe r-selected vs. K-selected species.
A
-
r-selected opportunists:
- organisms well below carrying capacity
- maximizes reproductive success
- lots of offspring early & often
- can become pests
-
K-selected equilibrium species:
- organisms close to carrying capacity
- longer lived, fewer offspring, & increased parental investment
- can become endangered
6
Q
Describe population growth density-independent vs. density-dependent factors.
A
- Density-independent factors: birth rates & death rates do not change with population density (ex: abiotic factors - pollution, temp. changes, overharvesting)
- Density-dependent factors: birth rates decreasing, death rates increasing, population density increasing (ex: competition, predation, food availabilty)
7
Q
Describe** abioitic **vs. biotic factors.
A
- abiotic: nonliving; referring to the physical and chemical properties of an environment.
- biotic: pertaining to living factors in an environment