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Question
1 population dynamics (continued)
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- compare and contrast spatial distribution, population density, and population growth rate.
- summarize the concepts of carrying capacity and limiting factors and their effects on reproductive patterns.
- sketch diagrams showing population dispersion patterns.
- analyze the impact a nonnative species might have on a native species in terms of population dynamics.
- design an experiment that you could perform to determine which population growth model applies to fruit fly populations.
Response
Question 1
Brief Explanations
- Spatial Distribution: Describes how individuals in a population are arranged in space (clumped, uniform, random).
- Population Density: Measures the number of individuals per unit area/volume (e.g., 100 deer per square kilometer).
- Population Growth Rate: Calculates the change in population size over time ($r = (births - deaths) + (immigrants - emigrants)$), reflecting whether a population is growing, stable, or declining.
- Compare: All relate to population characteristics. Density and growth rate are numerical; spatial distribution is about arrangement.
- Contrast: Spatial distribution focuses on location; density on abundance; growth rate on change over time.
Brief Explanations
- Carrying Capacity ($K$): Maximum population size an environment can sustainably support, based on limiting factors (e.g., food, space, predators).
- Limiting Factors: Biotic (e.g., competition, predation) or abiotic (e.g., climate, resources) factors that restrict population growth.
- Effects on Reproductive Patterns:
- At low population sizes (below $K$), resources are abundant; populations may exhibit exponential growth (e.g., $J$-shaped curve).
- Near $K$, limiting factors intensify (e.g., food scarcity, competition), slowing growth to logistic growth (e.g., $S$-shaped curve) or stabilizing the population.
Brief Explanations
- Clumped Dispersion: Individuals cluster in groups (e.g., schools of fish, herds of elephants) due to resource patches, social behavior, or protection. Diagram: Dots clustered in groups.
- Uniform Dispersion: Individuals are evenly spaced (e.g., territorial birds, plants competing for space). Diagram: Dots evenly distributed.
- Random Dispersion: Individuals are randomly arranged (rare in nature, e.g., some plant seeds dispersed by wind). Diagram: Dots scattered without pattern.
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- Spatial Distribution: Arrangement of individuals (clumped, uniform, random) in a population’s range.
- Population Density: Number of individuals per unit area/volume (e.g., $\frac{\text{Number of organisms}}{\text{Area/Volume}}$).
- Population Growth Rate: Change in population size over time ($r = (b - d) + (i - e)$), where $b$ = births, $d$ = deaths, $i$ = immigrants, $e$ = emigrants.
- Compare: All describe population attributes.
- Contrast: Spatial distribution = arrangement; density = abundance; growth rate = change over time.