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Published byAubrie Maxwell Modified over 8 years ago
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Population-Ecology
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Population Characteristics Geographic Distribution/Range- describes area inhabited by population of organisms Population Density- number of individuals per unit area; varies depending on species and its ecosystem Growth rate- change in number of organisms/size of population over time Age structure diagrams
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Factors affecting Population size Number of births Number of deaths Emigration-# leaving population Immigration-# entering population
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Growth Charts Direct/Linear- rate of population growth constant over time Exponential- (J-shape curve)- Rate of growth increases with time (note: ideal conditions/unlimited resources) Logistic-(S-shaped curve)- realistic way of expressing growth-limiting factors –Carrying capacity- largest number of organisms a given environment can support
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Limits to growth Limiting factors- factors causing population growth to decrease –Density-Dependent factors- affect population more strongly as population increases in size –Examples: Competition, Predation, Disease, Famine –Density-Independent- same impact no matter population size –Examples: Unusual weather, Natural disaster, Seasonal cycles, Human activities
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Age Structure Diagrams Deals with human population growth Size of human population tends to increase with time; Exponential growth Demography- scientific study of human population; how human population changes with time Birth rates, Death rates and age structure diagrams help predict why some countries have high growth rates and other countries grow more slowly
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Age Structure Diagrams Demographic transition- dramatic changes in birth/death rates Countries modernize and advances in nutrition, sanitation and medicine allow more children to survive to adulthood First, graph shows a lowering of the death rate (begin transition)
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Age Structure Diagrams Next, birthrates remain high (B>D) and population grows exponentially Countries continue to modernize, families begin to have fewer children and birthrate begins to decrease/population begins to slow down and population growth stops (end of transition)
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Age Structure Diagrams Predict future growth How many people of different ages (and genders) make up population U.S.- equal number of people across ages/gender; steady growth/slow Nigeria- far higher number of young vs. old people; foresee large population growth/double over next 30 years
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