Relative Density Flashcards

1
Q

What is relative density?

A

The representation of some relatively constant but unknown relationship to the total population size.

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2
Q

Provide an example of what you could use to find relative density.

A
  • roadside counts
  • fecal pellates
  • pelt records
  • vocalization frequency
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3
Q

What are the four parameters of relative density?

A
  • natality
  • mortality
  • immegration
  • emmigration
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4
Q

Define natality

A

The production of new individuals by birth, hatching, germination, or fission.

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5
Q

Define fecundity

A

An organism’s physiological potential reproductive capacity.

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6
Q

Provide an example of potential fecundity.

A

One female salamander may lay several hundred eggs per year.

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7
Q

Define fertility

A

The ecological potential, number of viable young produced during a period of time.

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8
Q

Provide an example of realized fertility.

A

The same female salamander (hundreds of eggs laid) may sire 30 young during a two year period.

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9
Q

Define mortality

A

Deaths, why organisms die and how others avoid it (survive).

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10
Q

Define longevity

A

Age of death of individuals within a population.

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11
Q

Define potential longevity

A

The maximum lifespan as set by physiology (old age, usually obs. in lab)

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12
Q

Define realized longevity

A

Lifespan following disease, predation, or other natural hazard, usually in field.

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13
Q

Provide an example of potential vs realized longesvity.

A
  • Great Horned Owls live 30-40 years in captivity, but only 7-10 in the wild.
    -lifespan of females compared to Rome vs today
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14
Q

Define immigration and emigration

A

movement into and out of populations

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15
Q

Why is dispersal important?

A
  • prevents inbreeding.
  • limits geographical distribution.
  • affects community composition.
  • some areas are sources, others sinks.
  • data collected with radio transmitters.
  • more difficult if small animal moves long distance.
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16
Q

If you cannot control dispersal, then what do you do?

A

Measure it.