Population Growth & life histories Flashcards
Lec 3 & 4
Life table types
dynamic / cohort and time specific
What are cohort life tables?
Cohorts of individuals born in a specific year or over multiple years are followed.
What are time specific life tables?
A single time period is used to construct a distribution of age or stage classes.
Easier to do but assumptions:
Sample of each class represents the population; age specific mortality and birth rates constant over time.
What is age-specific mortality represented by?
q
What is survivorship?
Differences in survivorship curves between males and females.
Some organisms exhibit a combination of different survivorship types during their lifetimes.
What is type 1 survivorship?
generally very few offspring
high parental care
and high survivorship
live with low mortality until you hit a point where there is a high die-off.
What is type 2 survivorship
Constant decline in the populations
relatively high survivorship.
What is type 3 survivorship?
Low survivorship
mostly sprays and pray strategies.
only a few offspring make it to “old age”
What is birth rate?
How does birth rate vary?
can vary with age
What influences the repoductive rate?
- Birth rate
- survivorship
What is Life history?
lifetime pattern of growth, development, and reproduction.
patterns that are adpations that evolve through natural selection.
Why would these adaptions limit an orgnisms’ ability to do equally well under a variety og different evironmental conditions?
Individuals have a limted amount og resources that can be allocated to specific aspects of thier life history.
An allocation to one aspect reduces the resourece availabel resources for other aspects.
Allocating resources to reproduction reduces the amount of resrouces available for growth.
what is Trade-off?
beneficial change in one trait results in a detrimental change in another.
slow vs fast growing/lived
large vs small reproductive output
early vs late maturing
semelparous vs iteroparous.
what are reproduction effort governed by trade-offs between fecundity and survival?
Reproductive effort: total energetic cost of reproduction per unit time is closely related to adaptive responses to age at maturity.
Energy invested in reproduction varies.
Allocation to reproduction leads to a decrease in growth.
Allocation to reproduction may increase mortality:
example in deer of Scotland - Milk hinds - higher mortality
Yeld hinds - lower mortality.