Unit 4 Lecture 23 Flashcards

1
Q

Real populations _____

A

Fluctuate

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2
Q

Explain the fluctuation about sheep in Tasmania

A
  • Sheep in Tasmania grows rapidly and exponentially, this carrying capacity then stabilizes
  • But there are fluctuations above and below carrying capacity… why?
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3
Q

What conditions might populations fluctuate?

A
  1. Populations might overshoot carrying capacity
    - and population growth will turn negative because there aren’t enough resources and end up cycling
  2. Environment changes
    - One year there’s enough resources, but next year its not as good (can’t support as many)
  3. Random chance births and deaths
  4. Competition
  5. Predators
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4
Q

what happens when populations overshoot carrying capacity?

A

N>K

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5
Q

When N>K the population is _______ and dN/dt is ______

A

Decreasing
Negative

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6
Q

What is Delayed Density Dependence?

A

(Time lag) can cause populations to overshoot carrying capacity
- Really great grass year leads to lots of reproduction
- By the time the young labs grow up, the field is overgrazed, now death rates go up overshooting carrying capacity

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7
Q

What is the equation for delayed density dependence?

A

𝑑𝑁/𝑑𝑡=𝑟𝑁(1−(𝑁((𝑡−𝜏))/𝐾)

𝜏 stands for time lag

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8
Q

How time lag affects population fluctuations depends on what 2 things?

A
  1. How long of a Time lag
  2. How fast is intrinsic growth rate
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9
Q

What is the experimental demonstration of delayed density dependence with flies

A
  • Number of adult fruit flies v offspring adult fruit flies
  • Adult flied were getting unlimited food but not for the laid flies, causing population crash
  • f you limit food for both the adult and offspring, population crashes become rarer
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10
Q

What are environmental factors the can cause population fluctuation?

A
  • Changes in food abundance
  • Changes in water availability
  • Changes in temperature
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11
Q

What is demographic stochasticity?

A

Random chance can also cause variation in death and birth rates

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12
Q

Fluctuations can cause populations to go ______

A

Extinct
- Even when populations are growing geometrically or exponentially (i.e. no carrying capacity)
- λ > 1 is a population that is growing
- Effect is stronger in smaller populations

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13
Q

What problems do small populations have when it comes to fluctuations

A
  • Population fluctuations get populations close to 0
  • Inbreeding reduces fitness of individuals
  • Allee effect can further reduce population growth (harder to find a mate)
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14
Q

Explain the predation cycle with the lynx and the hare

A
  • Hare population sizes go up, then Lynx populations go up (with a lag) then the hare starts to crash, causing the lynx to crash, then the hare goes up again and so forth
  • Hares are ‘K’ for the lynx; as hares go up, the carrying capacity for the lynx goes up so they can make more babies
  • But when that goes up the lynx east even more hares, and this reduces the hare population and the carrying capacity, causing the lynx population to go down
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15
Q

Explain this 𝑑𝑁/𝑑𝑡=𝑟𝑁−𝑎𝑁𝑃

A

rN: Exponential growth in absence of a predator

a: capture rate

NP: rate at which predators kill prey

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16
Q

Explain this 𝑑𝑃/𝑑𝑡=𝑏𝑎𝑁𝑃−𝑚𝑃

A

b: rate at which prey is converted to predator babies

aNP: # prey encountered and killed

mP: per capita mortality rate x # individuals