Chapter 5 - Birth, Death, & Movement Flashcards
What is a population?
It describes a group of individuals of one species. It varies from species to species and from study to study.
How does a population change?
It can grow or decline by changes in the number of individuals through birth or death (sometimes immigration/emigration)
What is an individual?
It can be difficult to define individuals in certain cases because they can be unitary or modular.
What is a unitary individual? What is another word to describe these types of individuals?
Unitary organisms are easily distinguishable and predictable (aka determinate because, for example, a spider has eight legs and it will never grow more legs, making it predictable).
ex. birds, insects, mammals, reptiles are all unitary
What is a modular individual? What is another word to describe these types of individuals?
Modular organisms grow by repeated productions of modules, making them indeterminate/unpredictable (can’t easily know what total number is). Essentially modular is the repetition of basic structure that are attached and more can be produced.
ex. trees, shrubs, herbs, chain-forming bacteria,/algae, corals, sponges, etc are all modular because they continue to produce modules (like leaves, cells, etc.)
What is a genet? Explain it in context of modular organisms.
It is a genetic individual. In modular organisms, the genet starts life as a single-celled zygote and will only be considered dead when all component modules that have been produced since have died.
ex. trembling aspens are all connected underground (clones), so together, they are a genet, but each single tree that appears to be individual (but isn’t) is a ramet (or module).
Describe how an individual module works.
An individual module starts life as a multi-cellular outgrowth from another module and proceeds through its own lifecycle to maturity and death. As this is only one part of the genet, it’s overall development is still indeterminate.
What is the mark-recapture method?
TRY SAMPLE QUESTIONS IN TEXT
It is a way of estimating a pop size by capturing a sample of individuals and marking them (through paint, leg ring, etc.), so that when another sample is captured, it gives an estimate of the whole population.
ex. 100 sparrow captures & marked; later, another 100 are captured and 50 are marked, so it suggests that the population is 200.
What is an annual?
It is a plant organism that has just one generation each year.
What is a perennial?
It is a plant organism that has a life cycle extended over several or many years. (For all organisms, a period of growth must occur before any reproduction)
What is a biennial?
It is a plant organism that spends its first year in growth and usually dies in its second year, but sometimes later
What is an iteroparous species?
They are species that breed repeatedly (more than once), devoting some resources during a breeding episode to further breeding episodes (if they live that long).
ex. occurs among most animals as well as annuals & perennials
What are semelparous species?
They have a single breeding episode in their lifetime.
ex. biennials and salmon
What is a seed bank?
It is a large population of dormant seeds buried in soil for further reproduction
What is a cohort in a population?
It is all the individuals born in a particular period within a population. (follows specific group/cohort)
What is a cohort life table?
DO Q7 pg.153
It records the survivorship of members in a specific cohort over time. In table:
- lx is the survival rate & gives survivorship curve
- mx is the reproduction of survivors
- lxmx is the number of individuals produced per age class
- if lxmx for each year is added up, R-knot (basic reproductive rate)
What is a static life table?
It describes numbers of survivors of different ages when it’s not possible to follow cohorts. It provides a snapshot of a group/cohort.