Biology 2483A Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Semibalanus Balanoides, Continental Drift, Cooperative Breeding

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29 Jan 2015
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A population is a group of interacting individuals of the same species living in a particular area. Interactions within populations include sexual reproduction and competition. Populations are dynamic with distribution and abundance privy to change over time and space. Understanding the factors that influence these dynamics helps us manage populations for harvest or conservation. Distribution is the geographic area where individuals of a species occur. Abundance is the number of individuals in a given area. Abundance can be reported as population size (the number of individuals), or density (the number of individuals per unit area). On a 20-hectare island there are 2,500 lizards with a population density of 125/hectare. Sometimes the total area occupied by a population is not known. It is often difficult to know how far organisms or their gametes can travel. When the area isn"t fully known, an area is enclosed based on the best available knowledge of the species.

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