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Published byLili Varga Modified over 5 years ago
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Populations A population is a group of organisms of the same species that inhabit a specific geographic area.
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Populations The rate at which a population grows can be calculated.
Four factors that are part of the growth rate equation are births, deaths, immigration, and emmigration.
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Populations Rate of Population Growth Equation
Rate = (# of Births + # of Immigrants) – (# of Deaths + # of Emmigrants) Extremely fast growth in a population is called a Population Explosion. Reasons for a population explosion are… New species introduced to an environment with few predators. Plentiful food supply. Abundant space.
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Populations An Alien Species is the term for the introduction of a foreign species to a new environment. Two examples in the Great Lakes were the introduction of Zebra Mussels and Asian Carp.
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Populations When a greater number of species leave a population compared to the number of species entering the population, this is called population extinction.
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Populations Biotic Potential is the maximum amount of offspring that can be reproduced in a given time frame. It is the maximum number of offspring that a species could produce if resources were unlimited . For example, human females could theoretically produce 1 child every 9 months between the ages of approximately 12 and 45.
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Populations Organisms do not usually reproduce according to their biotic potential. The maximum number of organisms that an environment can support is called its carrying capacity.
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Populations There are 2 main types of limiting factors affecting the rate at which populations can grow. These are density dependent factors or density independent factors.
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Populations Density Independent Hurricanes Floods
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Populations Density Dependent Disease (The Plague, Avian Flu)
Predation
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