Unit 4 Lecture 23 Flashcards
Real populations _____
Fluctuate
Explain the fluctuation about sheep in Tasmania
- Sheep in Tasmania grows rapidly and exponentially, this carrying capacity then stabilizes
- But there are fluctuations above and below carrying capacity… why?
What conditions might populations fluctuate?
- Populations might overshoot carrying capacity
- and population growth will turn negative because there aren’t enough resources and end up cycling - Environment changes
- One year there’s enough resources, but next year its not as good (can’t support as many) - Random chance births and deaths
- Competition
- Predators
what happens when populations overshoot carrying capacity?
N>K
When N>K the population is _______ and dN/dt is ______
Decreasing
Negative
What is Delayed Density Dependence?
(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
What is the equation for delayed density dependence?
𝑑𝑁/𝑑𝑡=𝑟𝑁(1−(𝑁((𝑡−𝜏))/𝐾)
𝜏 stands for time lag
How time lag affects population fluctuations depends on what 2 things?
- How long of a Time lag
- How fast is intrinsic growth rate
What is the experimental demonstration of delayed density dependence with flies
- 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
What are environmental factors the can cause population fluctuation?
- Changes in food abundance
- Changes in water availability
- Changes in temperature
What is demographic stochasticity?
Random chance can also cause variation in death and birth rates
Fluctuations can cause populations to go ______
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
What problems do small populations have when it comes to fluctuations
- Population fluctuations get populations close to 0
- Inbreeding reduces fitness of individuals
- Allee effect can further reduce population growth (harder to find a mate)
Explain the predation cycle with the lynx and the hare
- 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
Explain this 𝑑𝑁/𝑑𝑡=𝑟𝑁−𝑎𝑁𝑃
rN: Exponential growth in absence of a predator
a: capture rate
NP: rate at which predators kill prey