Biology 3446B Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Malnutrition, Mortality Rate

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Environmental factors (nutrition, weather, predation, disease) that influence reproduction often have greater impacts on reproduction when populations are large. Large population = large competition for food and cover some animals and their young end up in poorer habitats (b/c less food and less cover) lots of crowding = lots of stress = decreased reproduction. Ecological density = # of animals relative to the quantity and quality of their habitat resources. Maximum total reproduction (yield) occurs at an intermediate density and reproductive rate. Population density is often used as a measure of crowding, or of stress, or to indicate competition for resources. But density alone is a poor measure of these parameters. Population density can be measures = # of animals/ unit area. Ecological density cannot be measured exactly, so used indicators (i. e. condition of animals, reproductive rate, mortality rate) In a stable population, # of deaths = # of births.

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