Population
Population
Population
Population
❑ It consists of a group of organisms of a single species found in an area
❑ Individuals of a population are morphologically and behaviourly similar
❑ Individuals of a population interbreed freely
❑ There is no relationship of eating and be eaten
❑ The branch of science which deals with the study of population is known as population
ecology and population ecology is an autecology
Community
❑ It comprises of a group of organisms of
different species found in an area
❑ Different members of a community are
morphologically and behaviourally
dissimilar
❑ In a biotic community there is often a
relationship of eating and being eaten
❑ Interbreeding is absent amongst
different members of a community
❑ Community ecology is synecology
Characteristics of population –
1. Population Size and Density
The size of a population depends on
birth
death
migration
Size = Number of organism present at any instant + birth +immigration – death - emigration
i) Crude density - It is the density (number or biomass) per unit total space.
ii) Ecological density or specific or economic density - It is the density (number or
biomass) per unit of habitat space i.e., available area or volume that can actually be
colonized by the population.
Specific natality rate (b) (i.e., natality rate per unit of population) = ∆Nn/N ∆ t
Specific birth rate – The number of offspring born per unit time in various age group
Generation time – It is the average interval between the birth of and individual and the birth of its
offspring.
Doubling time – The time period required by the population to attain double of its size.
4. Mortality
It refers to the number of death of organisms in a population over time.
❖ Minimum mortality:
Also called specific or potential mortality, it represents the theoretical minimum loss under ideal or
non-limiting conditions. It is a constant for a population.
Age specific mortality rate – It refers to the fraction of individuals in a population dying during a given
age interval as found in many countries due to socio – economic
Conditions
Crude death rate (CDR) – It refers to the number of individuals dying per thousand in the population
per year .
5. Survivorship and survivorship curves
It denotes the probability of individuals in a population to
survive from age zero to given age.
A survivorship curve is a graph showing the number or
proportion of individuals surviving to each age for a given
species or group (e.g. males or females).
Three general types of survivorship curves are –
a) Type I or convex curves are characterized by
high age-specific survival probability in early and middle
life, followed by a rapid decline in survival in later life.
They are typical of species that produce few offspring but
care for them well, including humans and many other
large mammals.
b) Type II or diagonal curves are an
intermediate between Types I and III, where roughly
constant mortality rate /survival probability is experienced
regardless of age. Some birds and some lizards follow this
pattern.
c) Type III or concave curve shows high
mortality in the initial stages and comparatively very few
survive till the end of their life span. It is generally found in
shell fishes, molluscs and other lower organisms.
6. Ecological ages
Dividing the entire life span of an organism into ecological age groups.
In human , the ecological ages are –
❑ pre- reproductive age – population less than 15 years old
❑ reproductive age – population between 15 to 49 years
❑ post reproductive age - population more than 49 years
7. Age structure
Age distribution is the proportion of individuals of all ecological groups of the population.
The model representing geometrically the proportions of different age groups in the population of any
organism is called age pyramid
Stage 1: Pre-transition
Characterised by high birth rates, and high fluctuating death rates.
Population growth was kept low by Malthusian "preventative" (late age at marriage) and "positive"
(famine, war, pestilence) checks.
Stage 4: Post-transition
Post-transitional societies are characterised by low birth and low death rates.
Population growth is negligible, or even enters a decline
In exponential growth, a population's per
capita (per individual) growth rate stays
the same regardless of population size,
making the population grow faster and
faster as it gets larger.
In nature, populations may grow
exponentially for some period, but they
will ultimately be limited by resource
availability.
Effects of overpopulation –
❑ Unemployment and lack of proper utilization of manpower
❑ Pressure on existing infrastructure
❑ Exploitation of available resources
❑ Decreased production and increased cost
❑ Inequitable income distribution