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Population Ecology Chapter 40
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Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Dec 10, 2015

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Page 1: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Population Ecology

Chapter 40

Page 2: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Population Ecology

• Certain ecological principles govern the

growth and sustainability of all

populations

• Human populations are no exception

Page 3: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Limits to Growth

• A population’s growth depends on the

resources of its environment

• Deer introduced to Angel Island

– Population outstripped resources

Page 4: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Human Population Problems

• Over 6 billion people alive

• About 2 billion live in poverty

• Most resources are consumed by the

relatively few people in developed

countries

Page 5: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Population

• A group of individuals of the same

species occupying a given area

• Can be described by demographics

– Vital statistics such as size, density,

distribution, and age structure

Page 6: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Population Age Structure

• Divide population into age categories

• Population’s reproductive base includes

members of the reproductive and pre-

reproductive age categories

Page 7: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Changes in Population Size

• Immigration adds individuals

• Emigration subtracts individuals

• Births add individuals

• Deaths subtract individuals

Page 8: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Zero Population Growth

• Interval in which number of births is

balanced by number of deaths

• Assume no change as a result of

migration

• Population size remains stable

Page 9: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Exponential Growth

• Population size expands by ever increasing increments during successive intervals

• The larger the population gets, the more individuals there are to reproduce

Page 10: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Effect of Deaths

• Population will grow exponentially as long as per capita death rates are lower than per capita birth

rates 25% mortality between

divisions

Page 11: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Biotic Potential

• Maximum rate of increase per individual

under ideal conditions

• Varies between species

• In nature, biotic potential is rarely

reached

Page 12: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Limiting Factors

• Any essential resource that is in

short supply

• All limiting factors acting on a

population dictate sustainable

population size

Page 13: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Carrying Capacity

• Maximum number of individuals that

can be sustained in a particular habitat

• Logistic growth occurs when population

size is limited by carrying capacity

Page 14: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Logistic Growth

• As size of the population increases, rate of reproduction decreases

• When the population reaches carrying capacity, population growth ceases

carrying capacity

Time

Page 15: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Fig. 40.6, p. 690

initial carrying capacity

new carrying capacity

Page 16: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Overshooting Capacity

• Population may temporarily increase above carrying capacity

• Overshoot is usually followed by a crash; dramatic increase in deaths

Page 17: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Density-Dependent Controls

• Logistic growth equation deals with

density-dependent controls

• Limiting factors become more

intense as population size increases

• Disease, competition, parasites,

toxic effects of waste products

Page 18: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Human Population Growth

• Population now exceeds 6 billion

• Rates of increase vary among countries

• Average annual increase is 1.26 percent

• Population continues to increase

exponentially

Page 19: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

1999

1975

domestication of plants, animals 9000 B.C. (about

11,000 years ago)agriculturally based

urban societiesbeginning of industrial, scientific revolutions

Fig. 40.9, p. 695

Page 20: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Side-Stepping Controls

• Expanded into new habitats

• Agriculture increased carrying capacity;

use of fossil fuels aided increase

• Hygiene and medicine lessened effects

of density-dependent controls

Page 21: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Future Growth

• Exponential growth cannot continue

forever

• Breakthroughs in technology may

further increase carrying capacity

• Eventually, density-dependent factors

will slow growth

Page 22: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Fertility Rates

• Worldwide, average annual rate of

increase is 1.26%

• Total fertility rate (TFR) is average

number of children born to a woman

• Highest in developing countries, lowest

in developed countries

Page 23: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Fig. 40.10, p. 696

Page 24: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Age Structure Diagrams

• Show age distribution of a population

RAPID GROWTH SLOW GROWTH ZERO GROWTH NEGATIVE GROWTH

Page 25: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Fig. 40.11b, p. 697

CANADA UNITED STATES

INDIA AUSTRALIA

MEXICO CHINA

Page 26: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Fig. 40.12, p. 697

1955

1985

2015 2035

Page 27: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Population Momentum

• Lowering fertility rates cannot immediately slow population growth rate

• Why? There are already many future parents alive

• If every couple had just two children, population would still keep growing for another 60 years

Page 28: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Slowing Growth in China

• World’s most extensive family planning

program

• Government rewards small family size,

penalizes larger families, provides free

birth control, abortion, sterilization

• Since 1972, TFR down to 1.8 from 5.7

Page 29: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Effects of Economic Development

• Total fertility rates (TFRs) are highest in

developing countries, lowest in

developed countries

• When individuals are economically

secure, they are under less pressure to

have large families

Page 30: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Demographic Transition Model

• Based on historical data from western

Europe

• Postulates that as countries become

industrialized, first death rates drop,

then birth rates drop

Page 31: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Demographic Transition Model

Stage 1 Preindustrial

Stage 2 Transitional

Stage 3 Industrial

Stage 4 Postindustrial

births

deaths

relative population

size

low increasing very high decreasing low zero negative

Page 32: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Resource Consumption

• United States has 4.7 percent of the world’s population

• Americans have a disproportionately large effect on the world’s resources

• Per capita, Americans consume more resources and create more pollution than citizens of less developed nations

Page 33: Population Ecology Chapter 40. Population Ecology Certain ecological principles govern the growth and sustainability of all populations Human populations.

Fig. 40.15, p. 701