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Limits to Growth

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Title: Limits to Growth


1
Limits to Growth
  • 5-2

2
Limiting Factors
  • Remember, primary productivity of an ecosystem
    can be reduced by limiting nutrients
  • In the context of populations, limiting factors
    can cause population size to decrease

3
  • A resource base that is limited can also affect
    the long-term survival of a species
  • Ex pandas and bamboo

4
Density-Dependant Factors
  • Limiting factors that depend on population size
  • Density-dependent factors become limiting only
    when population density reaches a certain level
  • Do not affect small, scattered populations

5
  • Examples of density-dependent limiting factors
  • Competition
  • Predation
  • Parasitism
  • Disease

6
Competition
  • Occurs when populations become crowded
  • All organisms in a population need sunlight,
    food, water, space, etc.
  • Competition among members of the same species is
    density dependent

7
  • The more members in the population, the faster
    the resources are used up
  • Competition also happens between members of
    different species
  • Major force behind evolutionary change
  • When 2 species compete for same resource, they
    are under pressure to change
  • Over time, evolve to occupy diff. niches

8
Predation
  • Populations in nature are controlled by predation
  • Known as predator-prey relationship
  • Ex
  • sea otters and urchins
  • Sea otters and whales

9
Isle Royale
  • Well known example of predator-prey relationship
    is the moose/wolf populations on Isle Royale in
    Lake Superior
  • When moose numbers are high, wolf s increase
  • As wolves feed on moose, moose s decrease,
    causing a decrease in wolves
  • With fewer wolves, moose s can increase again

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11
Parasitism Disease
  • Parasites can also limit population growth
  • Parasites are similar to predators weaken and
    kill hosts
  • Large populations can be under stress making
    them more susceptible to diseases
  • More members easier to pass things around

12
Density-Independent Factors
  • Factors that affect populations regardless of
    their size
  • Examples
  • Unusual weather
  • Season cycles
  • Human activities (damming rivers, clear
    cutting)

13
  • Populations usually respond to such factors with
    a crash in population size
  • After crash, numbers may increase quickly, or
    stay low for awhile
  • Storms and hurricanes can wipe out populations of
    insects

14
  • Extreme cold or hot weather can also take a toll
    on populations
  • Droughts can affect entire populations of
    vegetation, which can affect populations of
    consumers

15
  • Environments are always changing
  • Most populations can adapt to a certain amount of
    change (grow or shrink)
  • Major upsets in ecosystems can lead to long-term
    decline in certain populations
  • Human activities have caused some of these upsets

16
5-3 Human Population Growth
  • Like the populations of many other living
    organisms, the size of the human population tends
    to increase with time.
  • For most of human existence, the population grew
    slowly
  • Until fairly recently, only half the children in
    the world survived to adulthood.

17
  • About 500 years ago, the human population began
    growing more rapidly.
  • Agriculture and industry made life easier and
    safer.
  • The world's food supply became more reliable, and
    essential goods could be shipped around the
    globe.
  • Improved sanitation, medicine, and health care
    dramatically reduced the death rate and increased
    longevity.
  • With these advances, the human population
    experienced exponential growth, as shown in the
    figure at right.

18
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19
Patterns of Population Growth
  • English economist Thomas Malthus observed that
    human populations were growing rapidly.
  • Malthus predicted that such growth would not
    continue indefinitely.
  • Instead, according to Malthus, war, famine, and
    disease would limit human population growth.

20
  • Scientists have identified a variety of other
    social and economic factors that can affect human
    populations.
  • The scientific study of human populations is
    called demography
  •   Birthrates, death rates, and the age structure
    of a population help predict why some countries
    have high growth rates while other countries grow
    more slowly.

21
Demographic Transition
  • Over the past century, population growth in the
    United States, Japan, and much of Europe has
    slowed dramatically.
  • Demographers have developed a hypothesis to
    explain this shift.
  • According to this hypothesis, these countries
    have completed the demographic transition, a
    dramatic change in birth and death rates.

22
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23
Age Structure Diagram
  • Demographers can predict future growth using
    models called age-structure diagrams, or
    population profiles.
  • Age-structure diagrams show the population of a
    country broken down by gender and age group.
  • Each bar in the age-structure diagram represents
    individuals within a 5-year group. Percentages of
    males are to the left of the center line and
    females to the right in each group.

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25
Future Population Growth
  • To predict how the world's human population will
    grow, demographers must consider many factors
    including
  • the age structure of each country
  • prevalence of life-threatening diseases
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