Paper 1unit III-C-Population Ecology
Paper 1unit III-C-Population Ecology
What is a population?
Krebs (1972). A group of organisms of the same species occupying a particular space
at a particular time
Gotelli (1998) A group of plants, animals, or other organisms, all of the same species,
that live together and reproduce.
1. Abundance or Density
2. Have boundaries
3. Change over time
4. Composition (sex and age)
5. Distribution (pattern, scale)
1. Maximum number of adult females that we can harvest sustainably from a mule deer
population.
2. Number of individuals needed in a re-introduction, e.g., wolves into Yellowstone, to be
fairly certain that the population will persist 100 years.
3. Given data on survival and reproduction, what are the chances that an endangered
population will persist 100 years?
4. How large of a marine reserve is required to prevent the extinction of a harvested fish
species?
FW 662 Lecture 1 - Density-independent population models
The usefulness of any particular model depends on the modeler’s goals. To describe
general ecological principles, it is usually necessary to sacrifice realism and precision.
To describe a particular population, it is usually necessary to sacrifice generality.
Williams et al. (2002, Chapter 7) Describe model usefulness with the following
conceptual model.
A mathematical aside
Change, difference, and ratio equations
When time periods are discrete we use difference equations to describe change over time. Difference
equations can be expressed different ways to highlight various aspects of the math. Three important
ones:
Change Equation N t +1 = f ( N t )
Difference Equation N t +1 − N t = f ( N t )
N t +1
Ratio Equation = f (Nt )
Nt
FW 662 Lecture 1 - Density-independent population models
In population dynamics we are generally concerned with four fundamental rates: Births
(B), Deaths (D), Immigration (I), and Emigration (E). We refer to models using these
parameters as BIDE models. Change in abundance over time is modeled as a function of
how many individuals are born, die, leave, or enter the population
N t +1 = N t + Bt − Dt + I t − E t
N t +1 = N t + Bt − Dt
we need to convert the raw Birth and Death rate to per capita rates (per individual)
because per capita rates are easier to estimate
Bt Dt
bt = and dt =
Nt Nt
Substituting
N t +1 = N t + bt N t − d t N t
Now we assume that per capita birth and death rates are constant over time
N t +1 = N t + bN t − dN t
Simplifying this equation
N t +1 = N t + (b − d )N t
The term b-d is the geometric rate of increase and is given its own symbol R
N t +1 = N t + RN t
N t +1 − N t = RN t (a difference equation)
∆N t = RN t
∆N t
=R
N
The parameter R represents the per capita rate of change in the size of the population
N t +1 = (1 + R )N t
In population ecology 1+R is given its own symbol lamda
(1 + R ) = λ
N t +1 = λN t a change equation
N t = λt N 0
lam=1.2
lam=1
lam=0.8
N
Time
N t +1
λ= a ratio equation
Nt
Hence we can calculate lamda without knowing the per capita birth and death rates;
however, in actuality it will probably be important to estimate b and d.
FW 662 Lecture 1 - Density-independent population models
Now let’s suppose that we have continuous population growth (or change is measured
over a very small interval). Biologically, this means continuous reproduction and
instantaneous survival rates. This requires a differential equation.
dN
= bN − dN
dt
Let b-d=r
dN
= rN
dt
r is called the instantaneous or intrinsic rate of increase
dN
Put in terms of N = rdt
N
dx
from calculus = d ln(x )
x
so d ln( N ) = rdt
t t
Integrate ∫ d ln( N ) = ∫ rdt
0 0
ln( N t ) − ln( N 0 ) = rt
take exponential of both sides
N t = N 0 e rt
FW 662 Lecture 1 - Density-independent population models
r=-0.3
r=0
N r=0.3
Time
Density Independent N t = λt N 0 N t = N 0 e rt
if r is small then we can use a Taylor series to find the approximate relationship
r2 r3
er = 1 + r + + + ...
2! 3!
λ ≅ 1+ r
The two models diverge as r gets large and as the number of generations (t) increases.
Consider the following example with R=0.2=r.
FW 662 Lecture 1 - Density-independent population models
R=r 0.2
N t = N 0 (λ ) t
N = N e rt
t 0
t
0 10.00 10.00
1 12.00 12.21
2 14.40 14.92
3 17.28 18.22
4 20.74 22.26
5 24.88 27.18
6 29.86 33.20
7 35.83 40.55
8 43.00 49.53
9 51.60 60.50
10 61.92 73.89
The distinction between R (or λ) and r is important biologically, i.e. pulse versus
continuous reproduction, instantaneous versus finite survival rates. There is confusion in
the literature between r, R, and λ, so be careful to understand the author’s definition.
FW 662 Lecture 1 - Density-independent population models
Caughley, G. 1977. Analysis of vertebrate populations. John Wiley and Sons, New York.
pp. 1-7.
Donovan, T.M. and Welden C.W. Spreadsheet exercises in Ecology and Evolution.
Sinaueur Assoc., MA.
Williams, B.K., J.D. Nichols, M.J. Conroy. 2002. Analysis and management of animal
populations. Academic Press. New York.