3 factors that influnce population GROWTH
population size for a given species that a specific environment can sustain indefinitely
carrying capacity
examples of INvoluntary regulations of human population growth
famine, disease or war
examples of voluntary regulations of human population growth
(birth control, abstinence, delayed marriage)
measure of person’s daily demands on an ecosystem [Amount of biologically productive area of earth (land and sea) needed to produce resource a person consumes + area needed to absorb and treat resulting waste]
Ecological footprint
gha
Global Hectares (gha)
represents biological productivity on one average hectare.
average amount of gha a person needs to meet their needs
2.1 gha
4 ways to reduce eco footprint
Eat less red meat
Take public transit, fuel efficient car
Reduce electricity use
Buy fresh locally produced food instea of packaged imported food
Populations grow and shrink because…
of difference in birth and mortality rains
demographic transition
When a population moves from growth, stability or decline
8 Impacts of the Industrial Revolution on population
What was the Green Revolution?
What are 5 factors that can see a trend in reduced family size?
3 Main Environmental Consequences of Human Population Growth
define ‘Tragedy of Commons”
which federal department in canada is responsible for foreign aid?
Canada’s Global Affairs Department
Population
group of individual organisms of the same species that live together in the same geographic area
Population density
how many individuals in a given area, # of individuals per unit area
ex: (26/km2)
Formula:
D (density) = Total number of individuals (N) // Space occupied by Individuals (s)
Ecological space
size of area that is usable by a species
Ecological Density (DEsubscript)
= Total number of individuals (N) // Amount of suitable habitat available for the species (Ecological space available/SEsubscript)
Population dispersion
= how individuals are distributes over the area
patterns of dispersion is also known as
spatial distribution
3 Main Patterns of Dispersion + and how it presents
Clumped dispersion = when organisms group together in an area (for protection, exploitation of resource, asexual reproduction etc.)
Uniform dispersion = equal spacing of individuals across an area (guarding resources for nesting or feeding)
Random dispersion = when individuals are scattered randomly over an area (when individuals are not affected by each other)
2 most common population sampling methods