Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- 1 Introduction to wildlife population growth rates
- 2 Population growth rate and its determinants: an overview
- 3 Demographic, mechanistic and density-dependent determinants of population growth rate: a case study in an avian predator
- 4 Estimating density dependence in time-series of age-structured populations
- 5 Pattern of variation in avian population growth rates
- 6 Determinants of human population growth
- 7 Two complementary paradigms for analysing population dynamics
- 8 Complex numerical responses to top-down and bottom-up processes in vertebrate populations
- 9 The numerical response: rate of increase and food limitation in herbivores and predators
- 10 Populations in variable environments: the effect of variability in a species' primary resource
- 11 Trophic interactions and population growth rates: describing patterns and identifying mechanisms
- 12 Behavioural models of population growth rates: implications for conservation and prediction
- 13 Comparative ungulate dynamics: the devil is in the detail
- 14 Population growth rate as a basis for ecological risk assessment of toxic chemicals
- 15 Population growth rates: issues and an application
- References
- Glossary of abbreviations
- Author index
- Subject index
15 - Population growth rates: issues and an application
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- 1 Introduction to wildlife population growth rates
- 2 Population growth rate and its determinants: an overview
- 3 Demographic, mechanistic and density-dependent determinants of population growth rate: a case study in an avian predator
- 4 Estimating density dependence in time-series of age-structured populations
- 5 Pattern of variation in avian population growth rates
- 6 Determinants of human population growth
- 7 Two complementary paradigms for analysing population dynamics
- 8 Complex numerical responses to top-down and bottom-up processes in vertebrate populations
- 9 The numerical response: rate of increase and food limitation in herbivores and predators
- 10 Populations in variable environments: the effect of variability in a species' primary resource
- 11 Trophic interactions and population growth rates: describing patterns and identifying mechanisms
- 12 Behavioural models of population growth rates: implications for conservation and prediction
- 13 Comparative ungulate dynamics: the devil is in the detail
- 14 Population growth rate as a basis for ecological risk assessment of toxic chemicals
- 15 Population growth rates: issues and an application
- References
- Glossary of abbreviations
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Introduction
This paper consists of two parts: the first is a general discussion of population growth rates, the factors that determine them and their role in studies of population regulation; the second is a specific example of the calculation of a population growth rate and its use in an evolutionary ecological study. The first part is based on the summary talk given in The Royal Society Discussion Meeting from which the collected papers are assembled in this issue, but was also much influenced by an informal discussion meeting hosted by the Novartis Foundation that immediately followed the meeting at The Royal Society, and which was attended by most of the speakers as well as other population biologists (see the Acknowledgements). But though the strongly expressed views of many of the participants have often affected or determined what we have written, this is not an attempt at a consensus, and the blame for any muddle-headedness rests with us alone.
Population growth rate and population regulation
Population growth rate
Is it justified to give the population growth rate such a central position in population biology? Is it not just one of a spectrum of useful concepts that permeate population dynamics, a particularly important one perhaps, but not deserving of so pivotal a role? We see several strong arguments supporting the importance of population growth rate, but with a number of caveats.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Wildlife Population Growth Rates , pp. 284 - 307Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003