Name Class Date 5.1 How Populations Grow Lesson Objectives List the characteristics used to describe a population. Identify factors that affect population growth. Describe exponential growth. Describe logistic growth. Lesson Summary Describing Populations Researchers study five important characteristics of a population: Geographic range is the area in which a population lives. Population density is the number of individuals per unit area. Population distribution is how individuals are spaced out in their range. Growth rate determines whether a population grows, shrinks, or stays the same size . Age structure is the number of males and females of each age in a population. Population Growth Populations can grow, shrink, or stay the same size. Factors that increase population size include births and immigration, which is the movement of individuals into an area. Factors that decrease population size include deaths and emigration, which is the movement of individuals out of an area. Exponential Growth When conditions are ideal, the larger a population gets, the faster it grows. When a population’s numbers grow larger with each generation, exponential growth is occurring. Ideal conditions include unlimited resources and absence of predation and disease. Logistic Growth Resources become less available as a population grows. Logistic growth occurs when population growth slows and then stops after a period of exponential growth has occurred. Population size stabilizes at the carrying capacity, the maximum number of individuals of a given species that an environment can support. Describing Populations For Questions 1–5 complete each statement by writing the correct word or words. 1. The is the area in which a population lives. 2. Population density is the of individuals per unit area. 3. How the individuals are spaced in their range is a population’s 4. Growth rate is how quickly a population 5. To find the of each age. in size. of a population, count the number of males and females Population Growth For Questions 6–10, write True if the statement is true. If the statement is false, change the underlined word or words to make the statement true 6. If the death rate is less than the birthrate, the population is likely to shrink. 7. Immigration increases population size. 8. Young animals may immigrate from the place where they were born to establish new territories. 9. A high birthrate and immigration decrease population size. 10. Populations grow if more individuals are born than die in a period of time. Exponential Growth age structure exponential growth carrying capacity immigration emigration logistic growth Number of individuals per area Population density Population Growth is described by Number of males and females of certain ages is affected by with unlimited resources is with limited resources is Population grows until reaching 12. Complete the graph by drawing the characteristic shape of exponential population growth. 13. What letter is used to refer to the characteristic shape of an exponential growth curve? Logistic Growth 14. Complete the graph by drawing the characteristic shape of logistic population growth. 15. What letter is used to refer to the characteristic shape of the logistic growth curve? 16. When real-world populations of plants and animals are analyzed, why do they most often have the logistic growth curve? 17. What does the term carrying capacity refer to? 18. Complete the table to name and explain three phases of logistic growth. Use the terms growth rate, population size, and carrying capacity in your explanations. Phases of Logistic Growth Phase Phase name 1 2 3 Vocabulary Term Age structure Carrying capacity Emigration Exponential growth Immigration Logistic growth Definition Explanation 5.2 Limits to Growth Lesson Objectives Identify factors that determine carrying capacity. Identify the limiting factors that depend on population density. Identify the limiting factors that do not depend on population density. Lesson Summary Limiting Factors A limiting factor is a factor that controls the growth of a population. Some factors depend on the density of the population. Others do not. Acting separately or together, limiting factors determine an environment’s carrying capacity. Limiting factors produce the pressures of natural selection. Density-Dependent Limiting Factors Density-dependent limiting factors operate strongly when the number of individuals per unit area reaches a certain point. Examples include: competition predation and herbivory parasitism and disease stress from overcrowding Density-Independent Limiting Factors Some limiting factors do not necessarily depend on population size. Density-independent limiting factors depend on population density, or the number of organisms per unit area. Examples include severe weather, natural disasters, and human activities. Some of these factors may have more severe effects when population density is high . Limiting Factors For Questions 1–6, write True if the statement is true. If the statement is false, change the underlined word to make the statement true 1. Limiting factors determine the immigration capacity of a population. 2. A limiting factor controls the growth of a population. 3. Limiting factors operate when growth is exponential. 4. Populations grow too large in the absence of limiting factors. 5. Competition is an example of a limiting factor. 6. Population size can be limited by factors such as predation. Density-Dependent Limiting Factors 7. When do density-dependent factors operate most strongly? 8. What are four density-dependent limiting factors? Density-Independent Limiting Factors 9. What term describes a limiting factor that affects all populations in similar ways, regardless of population size? 10. What is the usual response in the population size of many species to a densityindependent limiting factor? 11. Complete the graphic organizer with examples of density-independent limiting factors. Population Size can be limited by density-independent factors such as Vocabulary Term Density-dependent limiting factor Density-independent limiting factor Limiting factor Definition 5.3 Human Population Growth Lesson Objectives Discuss the trend of human population growth. Explain why population growth rates differ in countries throughout the world. Lesson Summary Historical Overview The size of the human population has increased over time. For most of human existence, limiting factors such as the scarcity of food kept death rates high. As civilization advanced, agriculture, industry, improved nutrition, sanitation, and medicine reduced death rates. Birthrates stayed high in most places. This led to exponential growth. Today, the human population continues to grow exponentially, although the doubling time has slowed. Patterns of Human Population Growth Demography is the scientific study of human populations. Demographers try to predict how human populations will change over time. Over the past century, population growth in developed countries slowed. As death rates dropped, birthrates dropped also. Demographers call this shift the demographic transition. Most people live in countries that have not undergone the demographic transition. An age-structure graph shows how many people of each gender are in each age group in a population. Demographers use such graphs to predict how a population will change. More people of reproductive age usually means faster growth. Many factors, including disease, will affect human population growth in the twenty-first century. Current data suggest the human population will grow more slowly over the next 50 years than it did for the last 50 years. Historical Overview For Questions 1–5, write True if the statement is true. If the statement is false, change the underlined word or words to make the statement true. 1. Over the last 1000 years, the size of the human population has decreased. 2. Since the 1800s, human population growth has been logistic. 3. The human population has increased because birthrates have dropped. 4. The combination of low death rates and high birthrates led to exponential growth. 5. Charles Darwin suggested that human populations are regulated by war, famine, and disease. 6. Complete the table below to explain how each factor affected the size and growth rate of the human population over the last 10,000 years. Factors That Affected Human Population Growth Cause Effect Agriculture Improved health care and medicine Improved sanitation Bubonic plague Industrial Revolution Vocabulary Term Demographic transition Demography Definition Chapter Vocabulary Review Crossword Puzzle Complete the puzzle by entering the term that matches each numbered description. For two-word answers, leave a blank space between words. For an answer with a hyphen, include the hyphen. Across Down 1. a limiting factor that affects populations no matter what their size 2. the larger a population gets, the faster it grows 4. the number of males and females of each age in a population 7. moving out of the population’s range 3. a type of limiting factor that does not affect small, scattered populations very much 8. a growth pattern in which population size stabilizes at a maximum limit 5. the maximum number of individuals of a species that an environment can support 10. moving into a population’s range 11. a shift from high birthrates and death rates to low birthrates and death rates 12. the number of individuals per unit area 6. a factor that controls the growth of a population 9. the study of human population