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The Human Population Miss Napolitano & Mrs. Rodriguez Environmental Science
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The Human Population Over Time Demography : the study of human populations Includes size, makeup, & growth Developed countries : higher average incomes, slower population growth, diverse industrial economies Developing countries: lower average incomes, agriculture- based economies, & rapid population growth
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The Human Population Over Time Human population began to grow rapidly in 1800s Growing exponentially – growth rates increased during each decade Growth rate due to increases in food production & hygiene Unlikely to be able to sustain current growth rate for much longer
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Age Structure Age structure: distribution of ages in a specific population at a certain time Ex: population has more young people population size will increase Graphed in a population pyramid High growth rates have more young people Slow/no growth rates have even distribution Fewer young people when parents have fewer children
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Age Structure Diagrams
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Survivorship Survivorship: percentage of members of a group that are likely to survive at any given age Notes when members of a population die Type I: more people survive to old age Developed countries Type II: similar death rate at all ages Type III: many children die young Developing countries
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Fertility Rates Fertility rate: number of babies born each year per 1,000 women Total fertility rate : average number of children a woman gives birth to in her lifetime Replacement level: average number of children each parent must have in order to “replace” themselves ~2.1 because not all born will survive to reproduce Fertility level of US dropped below replacement level for first time in 1972
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Migration Migration : movement of individuals between areas Emigration: movement out of an area Immigration : movement into an area Populations might be decreasing if not for immigration in many developed countries
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Life Expectancy Death rates have declined drastically due to access to adequate food, clean water, safe sewage disposal, & vaccines Life expectancy: average number of years a person is likely to live Affected by infant mortality (death rate of infants) Average life expectancy around the world is ~67 years Increased to almost 80 in developed countries More people means more diseases like HIV and TB
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The Demographic Transition Demographic transition : describes how populations have stopped growing in developed countries Industrial development causes economic and social progress that then affects population growth rates
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4 Stages of Transition Stage 1 :Birth & death rates both high, population stable Stage 2 : Population explosion Hygiene, nutrition & education improve, leading to lower death rates Stage 3 : Population slows & starts to stabilize Due to birth rate decrease Stage 4 : Birth rate drops below replacement level Population starts to decrease
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Problems of Rapid Growth Shortage of fuel wood Unable to boil water & cook food in many countries Unsafe water Drinking, washing, sewage disposal Causes diseases & parasites Negative impacts on land Shortage of land for crops, housing, or natural habitats Causes urbanization (moving to cities) or suburban sprawl ( cities become crowded, move to suburbs)
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Demographically Diverse World Not all countries fit the terms “developed” or “developing” Some mix between the two – ex: modern industries with low incomes Focus is on least developed countries Few signs of development, increasing death rates, high birth rates Populations are relatively stable in Europe, the US, Canada, Russia, South Korea, Thailand, China, Japan, Australia, & New Zealand Populations growing rapidly in less developed regions (mostly in Asia)
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Managing Population Growth Some governments tried to reduce birth rates China, Thailand, & India created campaigns to reduce fertility rates of citizens Campaigns include advertising, family planning, economic incentives, or legal punishments Currently, fertility rates have declined since 1970 Rates still higher in less developed regions UN projects population will be between 8 billion & 11 billion by 2050, depending on fertility rates
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