BISC 100 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Population Ecology

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A group of individuals of a single species that occupy the same general area at the same time. If you"re researching douglas firs in a temperate rainforest, it might be more useful to record their density, rather than the number of individuals in that habitat range. Population size and structure: population size fluctuates as new individuals are born or move into an area and others die or move out of an area. Some populations for example, douglas fir trees in a mature forest are relatively constant over time. For example, bacterial populations can double every 20 minutes. Lots of organisms that fit into the middle range: less constant, but not explosive growth: population ecologists use idealized models to i nvestigate how the size of a particular population may change over time under different conditions. Population growth: exponential: exponential population growth describes the expansion of a population in an ideal and unlimited environment.

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