Preston High School CGW 4UI World Population: Growth & Trends.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
World Population: Growth & Trends
Advertisements

Human Population Growth
Lesson 2: Human Population Growth Big Question Why Is Human Population Growth the Underlying Environmental Problem?
Human Population. SOME ALARMING STATISTICS Late 1600’s – ½ billion people 1830 – 1 billion 1930 – 2 billion Since 1975 – world’s population has added.
Section #1: Studying Human Populations
Chapter 4: The Human Population and the Environment
The Human Population and its Impact
Current Human Population Growth and Implications
The Human Population and Its Impact
The Human Population 8. © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Overview of Chapter 8  The Science of Demography  Demographics of Countries.
Chap. 9: The Human Population Sect
Section1, Studying Human Populations
Population Dynamics.
Objectives Define 5 ways scientists predict future population sizes. Explain different stages of demographic transition.
Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)
Section 1: Studying Human Populations

The Human Population and Its Impact
1 Human Populations. 2 History of Human Population Early Hunter Gatherers Nomadic, With a Strong Sense of the Earth Practiced Intentional Birth Control.
SEV5: Objectives 9.1 Describe how the size and growth rate of the human population has changed in the last 200 years. Define four properties that scientists.
The Human Population Miss Napolitano & Mrs. Rodriguez Environmental Science.
THIS IS THE PYRAMIDS CHA CHA CHA CHANGES ALL IN THE FAMILY HOLY HUMANS BATMAN CALCULATION STATION NATURAL CAPITAL.
The Human Population Chapter 9
Chapter 7 The Human Population. Human Population Growth.
The Human Population Chapter : Studying Human Populations Demography – the study of the characteristics of populations, especially human populations.
Human Population Chapter 8. Population: –group of individuals of the same species living in the same area & sharing genetic information Species: –All.
Millennium Development Goals Bhutan & Bangladesh Alicia Madsen & Diana Garcia Determine which country is closer to achieving its developmental goal (*=success)
Chapter 9-1.  Study of populations, usually human  Demographers study historical size and makeup of various world populations to make predictions about.
Applying Population Ecology: The Human Population and Its Impact.
The Human PopulationSection 1 Chapter 9 The Human Population Section1, Studying Human Populations.
Studying Human Populations
The human population. Population Explosion population explosion The study of populations is known as demography Study previous trends to create future.
Population Dynamics Review
The Human Population and Its IMPACT 7,000,000,000 and counting... How big is 7 billion?
LIVING IN THE ENVIRONMENT 17 TH MILLER/SPOOLMAN Chapter 6 The Human Population and Its Impact.
Chapter Five Processes and Cycles of Population Change.
Chapter 9 Applying Population Ecology: The Human Population and Its Impact.
The Human PopulationSection 1 DAY ONE Chapter 9 The Human Population Section1, Studying Human Populations.
Chapter 7 The Human Population
The Human Population and Its Impact Chapter 6. Core Case Study: Are There Too Many of Us? (1)  Estimated 2.4 billion more people by 2050  Are there.
Human Populations Chapter 8, p
Demography  Demography is the statistical study of human populations  Information about a population is gathered through a census  By subtracting the.
Demographic Transition Model 10/29 Bellringer: What information is this graph displaying? Give one fact that you can determine from this graph?
The Human Population and Its Impact Chapter What Factors Influence the Size of the Human Population?  Concept 6-2A Population size increases because.
Human Populations Chapter 9. Objectives Describe how the size and growth rate of the human population has changed in the last 200 years. Define four properties.
DAY ONE Chapter 9 The Human Population Section1, Studying Human Populations.
The Human PopulationSection 1 Demography is the study of the characteristics of populations, especially human populations. Demographers study the historical.
Chapter 7 The Human Population. Put the following 10 countries in order from most to least populated: Nigeria Japan United States Brazil Bangladesh Pakistan.
Chapter 7 The Human Population. 1. Scientists Disagree on Earth ’ s Carrying Capacity Every 5 days, the human population grows by 1 million people – 1.8.
Population Ecology Scientists study the dynamics of population, change, and the factors that affect distribution/abundance of organisms.
Chapter 7 The Human Population. Scientists Disagree on Earth’s Carrying Capacity Figure 7.1.
Chapter 7 The Human Population.
Chapter 7 The Human Population.
Objectives Describe how the size and growth rate of the human population has changed in the last 200 years. Define four properties that scientists use.
Human Populations.
Section 1: Studying Human Populations
Ch 7 Human Populations.
World Population video. 1 CE = 1 AD youtube. com/watch
World Population: Growth & Trends
Forecasting Population Size
Studying Human Populations
Objectives Describe how the size and growth rate of the human population has changed in the last 200 years. Define four properties that scientists use.
The Human Population Chapter 7.
Earth’s Population History
HUMAN POPULATION Chapter 7.
Section 1: Studying Human Populations
The Human Population.
Human Populations.
Section 1: Studying Human Populations
Section 1: Studying Human Populations
Presentation transcript:

Preston High School CGW 4UI World Population: Growth & Trends

In order to understand the world population we must understand the different ‘worlds’ of population growth. They are closely tied to economic development

‘ SETTING THE STAGE’ Advance Economies = Developed Countries DC MDC Transition Economies = Newly Industrialized NI BRIC Less Developed Economies = Developing Countries LDC LEDC Least Developed Economies = Third World LDC LEDC

Developed Country Developing Country Low birth rate Most of the people are over 15 years of age Long life expectancy Low infant mortality rate Most people live in urban areas (cities) High per capita Gross Domestic Product High literacy rate Highly industrialized People make a living in secondary or tertiary economic activities High birth rate Most of the people are less than 15 years of age Low life expectancy High infant mortality rate Most people live in rural areas (country side) Low per capita Gross Domestic Product Low literacy rate Little industry People make a living in primary economic activities.

Take away concepts Why is population growth so central to environmental problems? What is the current population? What will it be in 2050? What factors affect population growth rates? How do growth rate compare in developed vs. developing countries? What is a "demographic transition? What are its stages? Interpreting Population Pyramids. Understanding modern demographic trends.

Why Population is so important Thomas Malthus (1798) Organism populations increase exponentially, whereas the “environment” is “fixed” (actually decreases). Factually correct, but a complex problem... Modern example: high populations AND high quality of life

Malthus’ 1st Axiom  “The power of population is indefinitely greater than the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man.”  “Population, when unchecked, increases in a geometrical ratio (exponentially). Subsistence increases only in an arithmetical ratio (linearly).”

World Population: 7 billion As of Sept., 2009 (Super)exponential growth

Some observations... Pre-19th century growth rates were ~0.2%/yr <1 billion people. Pop. doubled in 300yr. 140 million died of plague: 6th, 14th, and 17th centuries. Replaced in a few centuries. Population increased after Renaissance Modern era population explosion: post-1960

Exponential Growth J curve Population growth after 1800’s ranged %! –Super-exponential growth Post-1960 was first time EVER that population doubled within a generation

Population by 2050: 9 billion

Toward “logistic growth” S curve time population Levels off eventually

Factors affecting Growth Rate Growth rate = Birth Rate - Death Rate 1.3% = 2.2% - 0.9% (today) Of these the Birth Rate is the most important contributor, specifically the Fertility Rate (#children/woman) Why? Because death rates have stabilized...

Factors affecting Birth Rate Global BR = 2.2% (95% in developing countries). Lessons on population control from Thailand, South Korea, Japan, India, and China: –Invest in Family Planning –Reduce poverty –Elevate the status of women

Factors affecting Death Rate Global DR = 0.9% (higher in LDC vs MDC) Low death rates due to: – medical treatments, –better food supplies and nutrition, –improvements in sanitation, and –access to clean water Lower DR is the main reason for the global population increase

INFANT MORTALITY When infant mortality rates rise…. Population actually increases Why?

ANSWER For many parents in the developing world their only sense of old age security is their offspring. If the death rates are high when their babies are born, they must have more children to ensure the survival of a son to care for them

Population Projections Current ~6.8 billion (and rising), growth rate: 1.2% (and falling…). Projected 2050 population: 9 billion Using modern growth rate: Calculated pop. by 2050: ~12 billion.

Calculating Doubling Times The “Rule of 70”: –Doubling time = 70/percentage growth rate –(… comes from ln(2) = 0.69) Example: –Current growth rate is 1.3%, so doubling time is 70/1.3 = 54 years (ca. 2060). –Projected pop at 2060 would be ~13 billion –But this won’t be the case… why?

Carrying Capacity At the heart of this issue is the concept of Carrying Capacity (K) –the maximum number of individuals that the environmental resources of a given region can support. Population growth and Carrying Capacity co- evolve. –Factors: Technology, social, political, economic institutions, physical & ecological environment.

Carrying Capacity Physical carrying capacity = “packing density”, limited only by space and resources Cultural carrying capacity is always less Still there is a large difference of opinion regarding how many people the earth can support. Accepted range for K is billion people

Where people live

Population growth rates

Demographic Transition Refers to the impact of economic development on birth and death rates. Responsible for the gradual reduction in pop growth rates during the late-20th century First noted by demographers for changes in 19th-century Europe, the DT is a critical shift in population growth and age structures that differentiate developed nations from developing nations

Four stages of DT 1.The Preindustrial Stage when there is little population growth because harse social conditions lead to both high death and high birth rates. 2.The Transitional Stage, when industrialization begins and health care improves, resulting in lowered death rates, but birth rates remain high. Most of the developing world here. 3.The Industrial Stage, when the birth rate drops due to modernization (and its accompanying social changes). Many developed countries and a few developing countries here. 4.Finally, the Postindustrial Stage is recognized by further reductions in birth rates, approaching or even below zero population growth. Approximately 13% of the world population (mostly European countries) is in this stage. A complete DT exhibits both declining birth and death rates

Demographic Transition When is the period of maximum population growth rate?

Demographic Transition Stage 1: Death rates and birth rates both high. Stage 2: Fall in death rates, Population increases. Stage 3. Decline in birth rate stabilizes population. Stage 4. Birth and death rates both low, population stable. Stage 5 (new). Higher death rates than birth rates, populations contract.

2) Transitional Stage 2.9% growth rate; 4.8 births/woman; 43% population under 15 yrs

Why is this group so important? Largest segment of population today.. “bottom billion” - world’s poorest Will be even larger in near future because most of population is under childbearing age (<15 yrs).

Population Momentum (also population lag effect) Phenomenon that population will continue to grow for decades even after total fertility rates equal only the replacement rate... Due to weighting of age structure towards the young… So, work toward zero population growth...

3) Industrial Stage 1.9% growth rate

4) Early Postindustrial 0.1% growth rate; 1.8 births/woman; 18% of population under 15 yrs

4) Late Postindustrial -0.1% growth rate; 1.2 births/woman; 14% population under 15 yrs

Population Pyramids for the four demographic transition phases

China’s past and future population pyramid

Post-industrial woes of low fertility Fewer young support increasing old Reduced workforce Population decline Significant socioeconomic impacts.

Four questions of the UN Population database 1.Developed vs. developing world 2.Demographic transitions ( ) 3.Health or Wealth first for prosperity? 4.Demographic impact of HIV-AIDS

Reducing population growth Successful efforts to reduce population growth by Japan, China, South Korea, Thailand, and Iran. These countries were able to achieve replacement-level fertility (enough children born to replace death of parents) within years - this is good news. Key Factors were: –Invest in Family Planning –Reduce poverty –Elevate the status of women

Views from Joel Cohen’s 1995 book “How Many People Can the Earth Support?” 1.Make a bigger pie: Increase human productive capacities through technology and innovation. 2.Put fewer forks on the table: Reduce numbers and expectations of people through such means as family planning and vegetarian diets. 3. Teach better manners: Change the terms of people’s interactions through improved planning and government to enhance social justice.

The most effective, lasting means for reducing population growth is/are: a)Forced family planning compliance b)Invest in family planning c) Reduce poverty d) Elevate the status of women e)Answers b, c, and d

Demographic Impact of HIV/AIDS HIV infection ratesImpact on life expectancy

UN Millennium Development Goals UN Millennium Declaration, Sept Adopted by 189 countries By 2015: 1.Eradicate extreme poverty & hunger 2.Universal primary education 3.Gender equality, empower women 4.Reduce child mortality 5.Improve maternal health 6.Combat HIV/AIDS and other diseases 7.Environmental sustainability 8.Global partnership for development