ecology group: population growth context: group members and their students; design scalable teaching...

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Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population growth equations and graphs. Learning Outcomes: Given data, students should be able to 1. plot data, calculate and interpret r; and 2. forecast future population size.

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Page 1: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Ecology Group: Population Growth

Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit

Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population growth equations and graphs.

Learning Outcomes:Given data, students should be able to

1. plot data, calculate and interpret r; and

2. forecast future population size.

Page 2: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Ecology Group: Population Growth

Assessment:1. Gauge prior knowledge

o Multiple Choice Questions (clickers)

o Concept Mapping

o Terminology Challenge – Card Game in Groups

2. Calculate Instantaneous Growth Rate; Predict Population Size

o Chalk-Talk

o Formative assessment (MCQs, clickers)

3. Group Activity: Physical Model, Growth of Bacterial Population

o Addressing Diversity

4. Post-Group Activity Formative Assessment

Page 3: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

What Do You Know?

A _______ is defined as a group of individuals of a single species that occupies the same general area.

A. population

B. community

C. ecosystem

D. biome

Page 4: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

What Do You Know?

The size of the human population has not changed in the last 200 years.

A. True

B. False

Page 5: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

What Do You Know?

The maximum number of individuals a habitat can support indefinitely is called the _______.

A. population fitness

B. community size

C. carrying capacity

D. reproductive potential

Page 6: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

log10(100)= _______.

A. 0.01

B. 10

C. 0.1

D. 2

What Do You Know?

Page 7: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Chalk Talk I

Explain exponential

Page 8: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Chalk Talk IN = population sizeB = birth rateD = death rateb = per capita birth rated = per capita death rater = instantaneous growth rateN0 = initial population sizeNt = population size at time t

Page 9: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population
Page 10: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Experimental Design

5 cups containing skittles

Each skittle = an individual Meningococcal skittlus

Cup = time of sampling M. skittlus bacteria.

Page 11: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Step I

Is the population size increasing, decreasing, or stable?

Count the number of bacteria per sampling period – population size (N)

Graph your 5 data points using N and t as your coordinates (Is N on the x or y axis? t?) *

How would you predict population size at the sixth sampling period (N6)?

Page 12: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Chalk talk II

Page 13: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Step II

Plot the data on semilog paper.

Is the population increasing, declining, or staying stable?

How would you estimate instantaneous growth rate (r)?

How would you estimate population size at time zero (N0) ?

Page 14: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Check of the Facts – Part I

If r is positive, the population should:

a. Grow.

b. Shrink.

c. Stay the Same.

d. The dog ate my homework.

Page 15: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Check of the Facts – Part II

If r is positive, the population’s:

a. Deaths = Births.

b. Deaths > Births.

c. Deaths < Births.

d. I love Brussels sprout.

Page 16: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

The type of growth illustrated by the global human population during the past 2,000 years is _______.

A. exponential C. linear

B. logistic D. extra-exponential

What Do You Think?

Page 17: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Future Directions

Explain curves graphically, written (freshman, nonmajors), equations (seniors)

Incorporate software packages (MS Excel, R)

Calculate N6 given logNt = logN0 + rt

Add stochasticity to data (biological variation)

Add terms for:

Logistic growth – includes K

Interspecific competition

Predator prey

Phenotype confers fitness advantage – evolution

Radioactive decay and age dating

Page 18: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population
Page 19: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Possible Summative Assessment Questions

Calculate the population size at year seven of a lion population with an initial population size of 20 and an intrinsic growth rate of 0.1 (rounded to the nearest whole number).

1) 25

2) 30

3) 35

4) 40

Page 20: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

More

Which r value best fits the curve in the figure?

1) -0.25

2) -0.7

3) 0.25

4) 0.7

Page 21: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

Summative Assessment

Q: The endangered purple falcon, which is endemic to your state, has a current population size of 10 individuals in 2012. The population growth rate of the falcon over the past decade has been 0.05. Delisting of the falcon from the Endangered Species List can occur when the population reaches 1000 individuals. Using the density-independent population growth equation, when should the falcon be delisted?

A: 46 years [question can be answered without a calculator if need be.]

Page 22: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

In the figure above, the term (K- N)/K

A. is greatest when N is large.

B. becomes smaller as N approaches K.

C. becomes larger as N approaches K.

D. is the carrying capacity for a population.

Logistic Growth Assessment

Page 23: Ecology Group: Population Growth Context: Group Members and Their Students; Design Scalable Teaching Unit Learning Goal: Understand and interpret population

More questions.

Q:Explain the differences between exponential and logistic growth. What are the differences with regard to growth rates over time? What drives those differences (what is different about their habitats)? What is the difference in their differential equations? What is the difference in the shape of the curves? Which is most commonly found in nature?