BIOL 2060 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Net Reproduction Rate, Survivorship Curve, Generation Time

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Section 3: effect of the biotic and abiotic environment on the abundance of organisms. Life history: is the (cid:272)olle(cid:272)tio(cid:374) of age or stage spe(cid:272)ifi(cid:272) traits that dire(cid:272)tly affe(cid:272)t a(cid:374) i(cid:374)dividual"s reprodu(cid:272)tive success. Together these traits are called a life history strategy. Examples of life history traits: number of reproductive events per lifetime (one, few, many, nu(cid:373)(cid:271)er of offspri(cid:374)g per reprodu(cid:272)tive eve(cid:374)t ((cid:862)(cid:272)lut(cid:272)h size(cid:863, age at first reproduction, relative length of life history stages (egg or seed, juvenile, adult) Investment per offspring (small versus large offspring: the probability of dying at different life history stages. Tophat question: werner and platt (1976) measured the size and number of seeds produced by 14 species of goldenrod, a common wildflower. Flowers once, then dies: produced a large inflorescence and many seeds per flower, higher adult mortality. Flowers repeatedly before dying: produces a small inflorescence and fewer seeds per flower. Trade-offs create variation in life history strategies: offspring size and number, current and future reproduction.

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