BIOL3007 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Monocarpic, Big Bang, Semelparity And Iteroparity

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Individuals have their own life history where they are born, grow, develop, reproduce and die. Can aggregate these up at a population level and examine a pattern of life and death. Early ( life fast die young ) or later ( slow and steady ). Trade-off of when to develop, grow and reproduce. The survival and production of offspring that contribute to the next generation, or population growth rate. But, by producing the same number of offspring earlier there will be more descendants so the timing of reproduction is important. Can be used to understand and compare relative fitness of different life histories within a species. Biennial: reproduce once in second year and die. Perennial: live for many years and reproduce once (monocarpic, semelparous) or multiple reproductive episodes (iterocarpic, iteroparous). Biennial individual doesn"t increase population the first year, but does in the second year.

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