Population Ecology Flashcards

Term 2, year 10

1
Q

Define ‘population size’

A

Number of individuals.
Note: larger populations may be more stable than smaller as there is greater genetic variability and more potential to adapt to environmental changes.

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2
Q

Define ‘population density’

A

Number of individuals per unit geographic area, e.g. number per square metre.

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3
Q

Give examples of density dependent and independent factors.

A

Density dependent: disease, competition, predation, food, nesting sites, mates.
Density independent: sunlight, temperature, rainfall (often abiotic).

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4
Q

PANDA PAW

A
Predators
Availability of resources
Nutrient supply
Disease/pathenogenic spread
Accumulation of wastes

Phenomena
Abiotic factors
Weather conditions

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5
Q

How might population be distributed?

A
  • Random
  • Clumped
  • Uniform
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6
Q

Define ‘natality’

A

Increases population size as offspring are added.

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7
Q

Define ‘immigration’

A

Increases population size as individuals have moved into the area from somewhere else.

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8
Q

Define ‘mortality’

A

Decreases population as some individuals get eaten, die of old age or get sick.

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9
Q

Define ‘emigration’

A

Decreases population as have moved out of the area to live somewhere else.

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10
Q

Population size equation

A

(Immigration + Natality) - (Mortality + Emigration)

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11
Q

Lincoln Index Formula

A

P = n1 x n2/n3

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12
Q

Define ‘R selection’ and ‘K selection’

A

R selection- only puts a small investment of resources into each offspring. Babies grow and mature rapidly.

K selection- Babies are entering a competitive world and invest heavily in each offspring.

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13
Q

Quadrat sampling method (density)

A

total number of individuals counted/number of quadrats x area of each quadrat

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14
Q

Quadrat sampling method (population size)

A

mean number per quadrat x total area/area of each quadrat

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