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Populations Population- group of individuals of the same species occupying a given area Increase –Birth –Immigration Decrease –Death –Emmigration
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Populations Change Populations increase –Birth rate > Death Rate –Immigration > Emmigration Populations Decrease –Birthrate < Death Rate –Immigration <Emmigration
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Exponential Growth r = Net Reproduction per individual Growth = (r) x (N)umber of individuals –Ex: Bacteria: r = 100% per ½ hour –Ex: Humans: r = 2-5% /yr Doubling Time- Length of time it takes for a population to double in size
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Exponential Growth
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Notes on Exponential Growth The more of something there is, the more it can produce. Population Growth Must be Limited –Limiting Factors Food Space Predators Disease Polluted Environment
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Carrying Capacity (K) Carrying Capacity (K)- Maximum number of individuals of a population that a given environment can sustain This leads to Logistic Growth
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Overshooting K
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History of Human Population
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Poverty The countries that have the highest population growth are the ones least capable of dealing with it. –In developing nations, children are still an asset, not a liability –In 1999, the richest 20% possessed 82 times the income of the poorest 20% –The richest 20% used 86% of the world’s resources, leaving 14% for the other 80%
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Demography Demography (‘People’ ‘Measure’)- encompasses vital statistics about people, such as births, deaths, number of males and females, age structure, as well as total population size. Age Structure- How many people of there are of various ages
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Fertility and Birth Rates Fertility- Births per woman Total Fertility Rate- number of children born to an average woman in a population during her entire reproductive life
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Zero Population Growth (ZPG) Zero Population Growth (ZPG) occurs when births plus immigration in a population just equal deaths plus emigration –When infant mortality is high, total fertility rate needs to be about 4 or 5 to reach ZPG –When mortality is low, as in more highly developed countries, the rate needs to be about 2.1 to reach ZPG.
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Don’t Forget the Footprint
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Two Problems Increasing Ecological Footprints in the rest of the world mean less resources and more poverty Immigration to developed nations means more big Ecological Footprints and using more resources
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