100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Lecture notes

Ecology Biology Notes: Population Ecology, Distribution, Species Interaction

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
83
Uploaded on
23-04-2025
Written in
2022/2023

Ecology/BIO-340 in-depth notes from unit 3, including population ecology/genetics, distribution of species, species interactions (commensalism, parasitism, mutualism), and more! Contains figures and pictures, important vocabulary, practice questions and answers, and equations. Essential information for studying for ecology.

Show more Read less











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Uploaded on
April 23, 2025
Number of pages
83
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Lecture notes
Professor(s)
Worthen
Contains
All classes

Subjects

Content preview

Notes 12: Population Ecology: Attributes
• Attributes
o Population: a group of potentially interbreeding organisms at the same time and
place that share a common gene pool
o Population size: number of individuals
o Population growth rate: change in number over time as a function of (birth +
immigration) – (death + emigration)
o Population density: number per unit area
o Range/distribution: geographic area over which the individuals are dispersed
o Population structure
§ Age class structure
§ Sex ratio
§ Genetic structure
§ Spatial structure
• Pattern of how individuals are distributed through the range
• Distribution
o Determining Factors
§ Environmental Tolerance: The Niche Concept
• Organisms will only live in ecologically suitable habitats
• Fundamental niche: describes abiotic conditions that can be
tolerated
o Environmental conditions in which a species can live
• Realized niche: includes biotic effects like distribution of food,
predators, and competitors
o Where the organism does live
• For each variable, there is an optimal zone where conditions are
ideal
o Zones of tolerance can be survived in
o Zones of intolerance are beyond survivable conditions
• Reproductive fitness highest in fundamental niche where optimal
zones for all variables overlap
o As population experiences any departure from optimal
conditions, performance will decline
o Depart from optimum along any N-dimensional axes
• Variable restricting survival is limiting variable
o Limits population’s distribution
o Can be abiotic or biotic
o May relate to fundamental or realized niche
• The more variables added, the less space of optimal zone
o For example, soil moisture and temperature must both be
in the fundamental niche for a plant to grow
o Niche defined by multiple axes is n-dimensional
hypervolume

,§ Barriers to Dispersal
• Organisms may be absent from an otherwise habitable area
because they can’t disperse to it
o Usually ocean for terrestrial species
o Creates different biorealms dominated by iconic sets of
species that evolved on one continent and could not leave
until continents collided
• All habitats are islands at some scale, surrounded by differentially
permeable barrier
§ Changes in Distributions Through Time: Seasonal Migration
• Many animals migrate following the availability of food resources
o Move or adapt
• Wildebeests
o Tanzania just below equator, from 1-11°S
o Rainy season in southern half of the country for
September-December
o Rainy season in northern half of country from January-July
§ Changes in Distributions Through Time: Climate Change
• As environments change, geographical area containing the
fundamental niche requirements may move, expand or contract
• Necessities a behavioral (migratory) or evolutionary (adapting to
new local environment) response
• Marine fishes are moving north into the North Sea as water
temperatures increase
• Alpine mammals, birds, and plants are increasing their elevation
o And decreasing the size of their habitat and population




o
o Can’t keep going up a mountain
• Some scientists estimate that 35% of species may go extinct in the
next 50 years because of climate change and range shifts
§ Niche Modeling and Invasive Species

, • By quantifying the environmental attributes of a species’ niche,
you can predict where it might live elsewhere on the globe if
limited by dispersal barrier
• If it crosses a barrier, we can predict how far its range might
increase
• Problems
o Doesn’t account for biological aspects of the environment
o Range may increase when separated from a
predator/competitor
o Maybe it exploits a particular place because of a foodplant
with its own environmental limitations limiting the species
to these environments
o In a new area with a new foodplant, it might expand
across the entire range of this new foodplant into abiotic
environments not yet exploited
o Doesn’t account for the possibility of adaptation
• Ex: Eucalyptus
o On sedimentary rock vs. granitic rock
o Draw up a lot of water from the water table
o Aggression to water depends on environmental conditions
• Principal Component Analyses
o Derive new variables that explain the most variance in a
data set and can correlate real variables to these derived
ones
o Highest abundance in center of range
o Where all fundamental niches overlap




o
o Living things do not remain static
o Dispersion

, § Types
• Regular
o Variance is less than the mean
o Variance can be zero if equally dispersed
o Usually caused by intraspecific competition, like
allelopathy or territoriality
• Clumped
o Variance is greater than the mean
o Usually caused by sociality or common response to
clumped resources
• Random
o Variance equals the mean
o Rather unusual because clumped resources and
competition are so common
o Previously clumped or regular distributions can degrade to
random over time, such as when seedlings (clumped) grow
up and compete (regular) and then die of other causes
§ Canopy trees, later in succession
o Patchy resource, social effects, limited dispersal
o High variance
§ Complexities
• Can vary with type of dispersal
• Can vary with development
o As the example of tree seedlings for random dispersion
o Life history stage
• Can vary with environment and resource availability and
distribution
o We can expect organisms to move with their resources
across space if they are able, creating patterns of seasonal
migration
• Varies with spatial scale of analysis
o Set by the experimenter
o Populations can respond at different scales to their
environment and create patterns at different scales
o At a large scale, we might find populations distributed in a
clumped over a range
§ Localized to places where resources are found
o At a smaller scale within patches, individuals may be
regularly spaced as they compete for these resources
o Analyses at different scales can reveal different things that
are important about the biology of the species
o Population Density
§ Correlations with range
$5.49
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
a_aga13

Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
Ecology (BIO-340) Notes Package
-
6 2025
$ 24.44 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
a_aga13 University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
0
Member since
8 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
82
Last sold
-

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions