Chapter 5- Populations

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Chapter 5- Populations

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Chapter 5- Populations. How many people are in the world?. 6.7 Billion. Population Density of the World. World Population over Time. Important Characteristics. Geographic distribution Density Growth Rate. Important Characteristics. Geographic distribution- area that is inhabited - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 5- Populations

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Chapter 5- Populations

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How many people are in the world?

6.7 Billion

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Population Density of the World

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World Population over Time

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Important Characteristics Geographic distribution Density Growth Rate

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Important CharacteristicsGeographic distribution- area that

is inhabited Density Growth Rate

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Important Characteristics Geographic distributionDensity- number of individuals

per unit area Growth Rate

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Important Characteristics Geographic distributionDensity- number of individuals

per unit area Growth Rate

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Important Characteristics Geographic distribution DensityGrowth Rate- how fast the

population grows

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Growth Rates

Population size is determined by Number of births

Number of deaths

Number of individuals that enter or leave the population

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Growth Rates

Birth rate- how many are born Baby Boom

Death rate- how many die Black Plague

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Growth RatesBirth Rate Death Rate Overall Rate

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Growth Rates

Immigration- movement into area

Emigration- movement out of area

What causes people to immigrate or emigrate?

What causes bears to immigrate or emigrate?

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Growth rates?

Where are the high birth rates in the world?

Where are the high death rates in the world?

Many developed nations have a negative growth rate. Why?

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What limits a population’s growth?

-ability to reproduce quickly-nutrients-space-water

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Growth limiting factors

Bacteria- divide every 20 minutesone day- 4,720,000,000,000,000,000,000

What is the reproduction rate for a mouse?

What is the reproduction rate for a human?

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Exponential Growth

When a population reproduces at a constant rate. This occurs only under ideal conditions with unlimited resources.

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Logistic growth

Logistic growth- occurs when a population’s growth slows or stops after exponential growth

Why does a population stop growing exponentially?

Birth rate decreases Death rate increases Immigration decreases Emigration increases

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Carrying capacity

Carrying capacity- The largest number of individuals that an environment can support

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Limits to growth

Limiting factor- a factor that causes population growth to decrease

CompetitionPredationParasitism and diseaseHuman disturbancesDrought and other climate extremes

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Density-dependent limiting factor Density-dependent limiting factor-

depends on the population size

Competition- food, water, space, sunlight Same species Different species

Competitive exclusion principle No two species can occupy the same

niche in the same habitat at the same time

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Density-dependent limiting factor Predation

predator-prey relationship

Parasitism and Disease

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Density-Independent FactorsDensity-Independent Factors- affect all

populations, regardless of size

Unusual weatherNatural disastersSeasonal cyclesHuman activities- damming rivers and

clear-cutting forests

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Human Population Growth

Demography- the scientific study of human populations

Demographic transition- a dramatic change in birth and death rates

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Demographic transition

1. Birth rates stay same, Death rates decline

2. Birth rates decline, death rates stay low

Birth Rate Death Rate Overall Rate

Birth Rate Death Rate Overall Rate

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Age Structure

Age-Structure Diagram- graph of the numbers of people in different age groups

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Future Population Growth How many people can the world

support?

What are the things that people need to live?

-food -water -housing -jobs

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Future Population GrowthResources vs. Population