Abstract
This article is itself a summarized statement concerning the various influences
which affect population densities and the population systems these lead
to. Known facts concerning animal populations have been analysed. systematized.
and critically examined. using the experimental and mathematical
approaches in the simpler situations. The more outstanding conclusions are
listed below.
Populations are self-governing systems. They regulate their densities in
relation to their own properties and those of their environments. This they do
by depleting and impairing essential things to the threshold of favourability, or
by maintaining reactive inimical factors, such as the attack of natural enemies,
at the limit of tolerance.
The mechanism of density governance is almost always intraspecific competition,
either amongst the animals for a critically important requisite, or
amongst natural enemies for which the animals concerned are requisites.
Governing reaction induced by density change holds populations in a state
of balance in their environments. The characteristic of balance is sustained
and effective compensatory reaction which maintains populations in being in
spite of even violent changes in the environment, and which adjusts their densities
in general conformity with prevailing conditions.
Far from being a stationary state, balance is commonly a state of oscillation
about the level of the equilibrium density which is for ever changing with
environmental conditions.
Destructive factors do not add to mortality when they continue to operate
over long periods, but merely cause a redistribution of mortality, for the intensity
of competition automatically relaxes sufficiently to make room for the destruction
they cause. Such compensatory reaction causes the effect of destructive factors
upon density to be much less when balance is reattained than that which they
produce when they first operate.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
1162 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献