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UNIT 3 - POPULATIONS Chapters 8 & 9
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8.1: Populations Population—a group of the same species living together in the same place
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Features of populations: – Size—number of individuals – Density—number of individuals in an area
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– Dispersion—how individuals are arranged in an area Random, even (uniform), or clumped
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How Does a Population Grow Populations change over time due to births & deaths – Growth rate—change in population size over time – Growth rate formula: (Births + Immigrants) – (Deaths + Emigrants)
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Reproductive potential—maximum number of offspring an individual can produce How Fast Can a Population Grow – Higher in species that produce more young at an earlier age
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Exponential growth— populations grow without limits – Makes a J-shaped curve – Ex: bacteria
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Carrying capacity—population size where birth rates equal death rates – Maximum number an ecosystem can support – Above carrying capacity = not enough resources, population declines – Below carrying capacity = many resources, population grows What Limits Population Growth
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Limiting resources—limit the growth of a population – Food, water, habitat, sunlight
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Competition within a population – Direct competition: food, sunlight – Indirect competition: territory, dominance
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Patterns of Population Change Density-dependent factors—impact depends on the density of a population – Greater affect on dense populations, less affect on sparse populations – Ex: food, water, disease
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Density-independent factors—impact does not depend on population density – Affects entire population – Ex: natural disasters, weather, fire
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8.2: How Species Interact Niche—how an organism uses its environment & its role in the environment
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Competition Competition—individuals attempt to use the same limiting resource – Can occur within species or between different species
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Predation Predation—predator feeds on another organism (prey) Predator’s population size rises & falls with prey’s population size – Ex: snowshoe hare & lynx, moose & wolf
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Other Interactions Parasitism—organism that lives in or on another organism (host) Mutualism—two species interact; each provides a benefit to the other Commensalism—one species benefits, the other species is not harmed or helped
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9.1: Studying Human Populations Demography—the study of human populations Developed countries have more effect on the environment (resource depletion) Developing countries have the largest increases in population growth
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Forecasting Population Size Age structure—the distribution of ages in a population – Shown in a population pyramid
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Fertility rate—number of babies born each year per 1000 women – Replacement level is the average number of children that must be born to “replace” Migration—movement of individuals – Immigration (in) & emigration (out)
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Declining Death Rates Population increase happened because of declining death rates Contributors to declining death rate: – Improved sanitation – Improved medical care (vaccines, medication – Improved nutrition
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Life expectancy—average number of years members of a population are likely to live – 1800’s: 50 years – Today: 67 (higher in developed countries; 78 in U.S.)
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9.2: Problems of Rapid Growth Fuel shortages (fossil fuels & wood) – Fuelwood is used for boiling water & cooking Unsafe drinking water – Local water used for drinking, cleaning, sewage Impacts on the land – Shortage of land for crops; urbanization causes suburban sprawl
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Managing Population Growth Governments in some countries restrict births – Ex: China’s 1- child rule Provide more education, lower fertility rates
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Growth is Slowing Current statistics: – World: 7 billion people, U.S.: 307 million – Took until 1850 to reach 1 billion people – Population should stabilize at 9 – 12 billion people by 2050 Population Growth Video Clip
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