Lecture Exam 2 Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the three types of growth curves and what do they look like?

A
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2
Q

Differentiate between the types of MSY

A
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3
Q

Diagram the difference in population growth between limited versus unlimited environments (environmental resistance). Label all axes and parts as appropriate.

A

Exponential = Geometric

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4
Q

Explain what a probability of sighting curve (Px) is and indicate how it’s shape affects (k) and, thus, visibility of wildlife. (i.e., the extent to which the surrounding habitat influences our ability to record birds when walking line transects).

A

k = estimate of slope of curve

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5
Q

What are the 4 main assumptions of mark-recapture population estimates?

A

Continued trapping can create problems with meeting the closure assumption

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6
Q

What are the main assumptions of line-transect (point) populations estimates?

A
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7
Q

What are the 4 types of reproductive patterns we see in wildlife populations?

A

Chaotic: unpredictable or random
Cyclical: predictable increases and decreases over time
Damped Oscillation: population exceeds carrying capacity, then fails to meet carrying capacity, eventually settles around capacity
Crash: sudden large decline in population size over a short period of time

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8
Q

What makes a population density dependent reproducers?

A

Density dependence is caused by competition for limited resources

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9
Q

Define annual/harvestable surplus

A
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10
Q

Define instantaneous rate of harvest and isolated rate of harvest and instantaneous rate of increase

A

Instantaneous rate of increase: increase at a particular instant

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11
Q

What is maximum sustained yield

A

Maximum number of individuals that can be taken from the population over time without reducing the population in the long run

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12
Q

What is compensatory mortality?

A
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13
Q

What is the inflection point?

A

Point on a growth curve representing maximum population growth

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14
Q

What is recruitment rate?

A

Rate at which adults are added to a population through either immigration or juveniles reaching reproductive maturity

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15
Q

What is carrying capacity?

A
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16
Q

Define abnormal mortality factor and proximate mortality factor

A
17
Q

Explain the Peterson estimate method and Bailey’s Improvement

A
18
Q

Describe the Hayne Fixed-Width Transect method. Who improved it and how?

A
19
Q

Define fertility/fecundity table

A
20
Q

What’s the relationship between H and r with regards to harvesting theory?

A

H = harvest rate across the year
r = instantaneous rate of pop. increase
If H = r, the population remains stable
If H > r, the population goes down
if H < r, the population goes up