Lecture 10 Flashcards

1
Q

What is mortality? What does it provide?

A

The rates at which individuals die within a population, provide information about its functioning

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2
Q

Pearl (1928) argued that there were 3 types of mortality curves. What are these?

A

. Type 1: low early mortality, high late mortality. Typical of humans in developed world (Most individuals survive until old age)
. Type 2: probability of death remains constant with age, leading to a linear decline in survivorship (have a constant chance of dying throughout their lives)
. Type 3: characteristic of most animal populations. Very high early mortality, but those that remain have high rate of survivorship (individuals usually die young) e.g. many species of fish

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3
Q

What do mortality/ survivorship curves reflect?

A

Particular habitat conditions for the population, and density

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4
Q

What is a cohort?

A

. A group of animals all born during the same time interval (e.g. all kids born in the UK this year)
. Track the date of all the individuals within this cohort from birth until death

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5
Q

What are cohorts and life tables used for/ help with?

A

. Widely used when studying animal populations
. Help identify key areas of age-specific mortality and fecundity
. Used where animals breed continuously, or where generations overlap
. Aid decisions on management of animal populations

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6
Q

Describe diagrammatic life tables

A

. Relatively easy to follow

. Can be more difficult to analyse and make predictions

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7
Q

Describe cohort life tables, give examples

A

. Show changing patterns of mortality with age or stage of the animal
. Allows us to construct survivorship curves
. Births amongst different ages also measured
. Allows us to construct fecundity schedules
. Simplest with animals with an annual life-cycle (produce young ever year)
. E.g. most insects, annual plants etc.)

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8
Q

What are k-values (killing factors)?

A

Scaled measures of impacts of mortality at each stage relative to the next stage

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9
Q

Why are k-values (killing factors) scaled?

A

. Raw data converted to proportion or % mortalities

. Standardises data from different years (so you can compare)

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10
Q

Why are k-values (killing factors) relative to the next stage?

A

. Assume mortality factors are sequential

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11
Q

What are the uses of k-values (killing factors)?

A

. Can be summed to show overall mortality
. Compare k-values across a range of years to identify key factor
. Compare k-values with population size to identify regulating factor
(. Many insect examples but fewer mammal or bird examples)

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12
Q

What are the two types of life tables that can be developed? What does it depend on?

A

. Static life tables
. Fixed life tables
Depends on how the survival is measured

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13
Q

How are fixed cohort life tables survival measured? Give the positives and negatives of them compared to other life tables

A

Examine the population born in a particular year (cohort), through the death of every individual born in that year.
Most reliable data.
Major particle problems in construction- serious problem hindering their use

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14
Q

How are static life tables survival measured? Give the positives of them over other life tables

A

The whole animal population is studied within a single year.
Easier to construct.
Confuses two processes:
- age-specific changes in birth and death rates
- year- to- year variations in these rates in the past
Nevertheless provide a useful overview
May be only solution where cohort life tables are impossible to construct

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15
Q

Why are there two methods of constructing life tables (fixed or static)?

A

. Depends on the life-cycles of the animals involved
. Species with a simple annual life cycle- much easier to analyse as a cohort (e.g. many insects): fixed cohort life table
. Species which live for several years, especially birds and mammals, would need to mark it tag each individual (born in a year- difficult)
. This is often impractical, hence need to look at population segment: static cohort life table

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16
Q

What do diagrammatic life tables provide?

A

A simple overview of births/ deaths/ survivorships

17
Q

Conventional (tabular) life tables are more complex than others, but provide more quantities and biologically meaningful information. What do they allow?

A

You to infer what’s going on in a population and determine the major detergents of population mortality and regulation. (Deeper understanding of the processes)