Single-Species Populations III: Simple Models in Discrete Time Flashcards

1
Q

Describe a problem with the discrete logistic

A
  • fractional individuals can be outputted because r is a real number
  • fractional individuals do not exist
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2
Q

How are fractional individuals removed from the discrete logistic?

A
  • truncating in R
  • introduce randomisation into the number of new individuals using the Poisson distribution
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3
Q

What is the Poisson distribution?

A
  • a discrete distribution that is specified by the mean (becomes more symmetrical as the mean increases)
  • there is only one parameter
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4
Q

What does the Poisson distribution introduce?

A
  • demographic stochasticity
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5
Q

What is demographic stochasticity?

A

fluctuations driven by natality and morbidity stochasticity

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6
Q

As average population size decreases…

A
  • percentage fluctuation increases
  • sometimes resulting in chance extinction when K < 50
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7
Q

Chance extinction is more likely in

A

K-selected species

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8
Q

What is the consequence of demographic stochasticty for r-selected species?

A

must survive in large groups to prevent the combined population destruction of both environmental and demographic stochasticity.

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9
Q

List some risks of small populations

A
  • demographic stochasticity
  • Allee effect
  • genetic drift
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10
Q

Describe genetic drift

A

decreases genetic diversity within populations when operating on a constrained gene pool

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11
Q

Give an example of genetic rescue

A

Florida panther (Puma concolor cougar), which did not naturally recover from the effects of drift on its small population
- human intervention in the form of panther translocation from Texas in 1995 facilitated recovery

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12
Q

Describe the Allee effect

A

weak or strong

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13
Q

Describe the weak Allee effect

A

per capita population growth rate remaining low (there is no boom phase) when population sizes are small.

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14
Q

Describe the strong Allee effect

A

negative population growth below some critical threshold.

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15
Q

List three examples of the Allee effect in wild populations

A
  • musk ox
  • African wild dogs
  • kakapo
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16
Q

Describe the Allee effect in musk ox

A
  • relies upon group defence as an anti-predator strategy
  • disintegrates on group size reduction
17
Q

Describe the Allee effect in African wild dogs

A

rely upon large group sizes for their pack hunting behaviours

18
Q

Describe the kakapo

A
  • heaviest parrot species
  • flightless
  • ground-nesting
  • nocturnal
  • low basal metabolic rate that allows it to subsist on low-quality food
19
Q

Describe K selection in the kakapo

A
  • decades-long lifespan
  • small clutch size
  • clutch frequency of 2-7 years, depending on the abundance of high-quality food for offspring rearing
20
Q

Describe kakapo restoration

A
  • Stewart Island, onto which no mustelids were introduced
  • 1977 there were 100-200 birds discovered, however these were being predated upon by cats
  • lowest population size reached by the Kakapo was 51 birds, with an asymmetric weighting towards males
  • 1980-1997, birds were translocated to Whenua Hou, Te Kakahu, Anchor and Maud islands, and an intensive and costly recovery programme introduced
21
Q

Describe the kakapo recovery programme

A
  • fitting every bird with a smart transmitter for tracking
  • annual catching and health inspection
  • refilling island feeding stations to supplement nutrient acquisition
  • remote monitoring
  • 69 cases of chick removal (on failure of food supply) for artificial incubation and hand rearing to eliminate demographic stochasticity
  • stringent biosecurity protocols
  • traps for predator deterrence
  • helicoptering 21 kakapo affected with kakapo aspergillosis
22
Q

Describe kakapo aspergillosis

A
  • 2019 outbreak on Codfish island for intensive treatment
  • 12 to recover and 9 deaths, 2 of which were adult females named Hoki and Huhana, and 7 chicks and juveniles from the 2019 cohort
23
Q

Describe kakapo immunity

A
  • low immunity
  • hypothesized to be linked to the genetic erosion arising from their small population
24
Q

Describe the general decline of British birds

A

From a 1975 index of 100, 130 species have all declined to roughly 90.

25
Q

Describe the specific decline of British birds

A
  • wetland and water birds have decreased to roughly 86
  • woodland birds to approximately 71
  • farmland birds to approximately 44
26
Q

Describe discrete time population dynamics in closed systems with high r

A
  • r values between 1 and 2 are associated with dampened oscillations (decreased randomness) followed by 2 point limit cycles
  • r>3, deterministic yet unpredictable chaos is outputted, relative to the starting population size
27
Q

Describe deterministic chaos generally

A
  • large recruitment in a single generation allows the population to exceed K
  • coupled to overcompensating density-dependence
  • for high Nt, Nt+1 will decrease
  • ‘boom-bust’ cycling
28
Q

Describe deterministic chaos specifically

A
  • plotting Nt against Nt+1 shows an equilibrium, but it is not stable
  • the only point of stability is when Nt = K
  • equilibrium is never reached
  • Nt ≠ Nt+1