Title: Applying Population Ecology: The Human Population
1Applying Population Ecology The Human Population
2Question 1
- What are the three factors that affect human
population growth? Write an equation to
mathematically describe the relationship between
these rates and the rate of population change.
33 Factors Affecting Population Growth
- Crude birth rate number of live births per
1,000 people in a given year - Crude death rate number of deaths per 1,000
people in a population in a given year - Migration
- Immigration individuals entering a population.
- Emigration when individuals leave a population.
4Factors Affecting Human Population Size
- Population change is calculated by subtracting
the number of people leaving a population
(through death emigration) from the number
entering it (birth Immigration) - Population change
- (Births Immigration) (Deaths Emigration)
If this is higher, population increases
If this is higher, population decreases
5Average Crude Birth and Death Rates
Average crude birth rate
Average crude death rate
Africa
38
14
Latin America
22
6
Asia
20
7
18
Oceania
7
United States
14
8
North America
14
8
10
Europe
12
Fig. 7-2b, p. 130
6Question 2
- Compare rates of population growth in developed
and developing countries.
7Developed vs. Developing
- The rate _at_ which the worlds population is
increasing has slowed, but population continues
to grow fairly rapidly. - Global Annual Exponential Growth Rate
-
- 1.2
8Developed vs. Developing
- Developed Country Growth Rate
- 0.1 annually
- Developing Country Growth Rate
- 1.5 annually (15 times faster)
- Environmental impact of births in developed
countries 30x higher!
9Average Crude Birth and Death Rates
Average crude birth rate
Average crude death rate
World
21
9
All developed countries
11
10
All developing countries
24
8
Developing countries (w/o China)
27
9
Fig. 7-2a, p. 130
10Question 3
- Describe how fertility rate affects population
growth. Explain at least five factors that affect
birth rate and five factors that affect death
rate.
11Fertility
- Fertility
- the number of births that occur to an individual
woman or in a population - Replacement-level fertility
- number of children a couple must have to replace
themselves. - (Developed 2.1 / Developing 2.5)
- Total fertility rate (TFR)
- average number of children a woman has in her
reproductive years. - (Developed 1.6 / Developing 3.0)
12World Population Projections
Fig. 7-3, p. 131
13US Fertility Rates (1917-2005)
Fig. 7-4, p. 131
14Factors Affecting Birth Rates and Fertility Rates
- Children as labor force
- Cost of raising and educating children
- Availability of pension systems
- Urbanization
- Education and employment of women
- Infant mortality rate
- Average age of marriage
- Abortion
- Availability of birth control
- Culture, religious values, and traditions
15Factors Affecting Death Rates
- Life expectancy
- Infant mortality rate
- Best measure of a countrys level of nutrition
health care - AIDS and other diseases
16Question 4
- Describe how are age structure diagrams are used
to make population and economic projections. Be
able to analyze an age structure diagram to
determine population growth or decline.
17Age Structure
- Age Structure
- The distribution of males females in each age
group in a population - Three Age Categories
- Pre-Reproductive (0-14)
- Reproductive (15-44)
- Post-Reproductive (45-85)
18Population Age Structures
Male
Female
Male
Female
Male
Female
Male
Female
Expanding Rapidly Guatamala Nigeria Saudi Arabia
Expanding Slowly United States Australia Canada
Stable Spain Austria Greece
Declining Germany Bulgaria Italy
Prereproductive ages 0-14
Reproductive ages 15-44
Postreproductive ages 45-85
Fig. 7-8, p. 135
19Effects of Population Decline
- 40 nations have stable or declining populations
- Rapid declines can create severe social and
economic problems
- Labor and social security problems
- Social and economic impacts of AIDS
20Tracking the US Baby Boom Generation
Fig. 7-10, p. 136
21Question 5
- What four factors limit the ability of developing
countries from making a demographic transition?
22Demographic Transition
- As countries become more industrialized, first
their death rates and then their birth rates
decline. - Problem
- Conditions that allowed countries to develop in
the past are not available today
234 Limiting Factors
- Shortages of skilled workers
- Needed to produce high tech products necessary to
compete in global economy - Lack of capital other resources
- Rise in debt owed to developed
- countries
- Little left to improve conditions
- Less economic assistance available
24Question 6
- Explain how a combination of family planning and
empowering women can work to slow population
growth?
25Family Planning
- Family Planning
- Provides educational clinical services that
help couples choose how many children to have
when to have them - How does it help?
- Increases contraception use
- Reduces of abortions
- Lowers risk of maternal
- fetal death from pregnancy
26Empowering Women
- 3 Key Factors Linked to Women Having Fewer
Healthier Children - Education
- Jobs Outside the Home
- Living in societies where
- rights are not suppressed
27Reducing Poverty
- Reducing Poverty
- Reduces Unsustainable Consumption
28Question 7
- What are the major resource and environmental
problems of urban sprawl and urbanization?
29Urbanization
- Moving from rural areas to the city!
- 1/2 the worlds population lives in densely
populated urban areas - People come in search of jobs, food, housing,
better life, freedom from oppression.
30Major Urban Areas of the World
Karachi 10.4 million 16.2 million
Dhaka 13.2 million 22.8 million
Beijing 10.8 million 11.7 million
Tokyo 26.5 million 27.2 million
Los Angeles 13.3 million 14.5 million
Cairo 10.5 million 11.5 million
New York 16.8 million 17.9 million
Mumbai (Bombay) 16.5 million 22.6 million
Calcutta 13.3 million 16.7 million
Mexico City 18.3 million 20.4 million
Osaka 11.0 million 11.0 million
Lagos 12.2 million 24.4 million
Sao Paulo 18.3 million 21.2 million
Manila 10.1 million 11.5 million
Delhi 13.0 million 20.9 million
Jakarta 11.4 million 17.3 million
Shanghai 12.8 million 13.6 million
Buenos Aires 12.1 million 13.2 million
Fig. 7-13, p. 141
31Major Urban Areas of the US
Fig. 7-15, p. 142
32Advantages of Urbanization (especially in
Developed Countries)
- Jobs
- Education
- Better access to health care
- Recycling is more economically feasible
- Biodiversity may be preserved in some rural areas
337 Disadvantages of Urbanization
- Resource use and waste
- Reduction in vegetation
- Water supply problems and flooding
- Dont grow food
- Air, noise and water pollution
- Disease, poverty, crime and accidents
- Microclimates Urban heat islands
34Extreme Poverty in Urban Areas
Fig. 7-20, p. 146
35Urban Sprawl
- Growth of low-density development on the edges of
towns cities - Product of increased prosperity, lots of
affordable land, cars, cheap gas poor urban
planning - Increases dependence on cars / flooding / energy
waste / destroys useful land
36Urban Sprawl
1967
1952
1995
1972
Fig. 7-16, p. 143
37Some Undesirable Effects of Urban Sprawl
Fig. 7-17a, p. 144
38Some Undesirable Effects of Urban Sprawl
39Question 8
- Describe how the development of ecocities can
make for more sustainable urban environments.
40Smart Growth
- Encourages more environmentally friendly
sustainable development by - Lowering dependence on car
- Controlling directing sprawl
- Reduces wasteful resource use
41Making Cities More Sustainable Ecocities /
Green Cities
- Prevents Pollution Reduces Waste
- Uses energy matter more efficiently
- Recycles, reuses composts 60 of solid waste
- Uses more renewable energy sources
- Preserves surrounding land
42Bus System of Curitiba, Brazil
City center
City center
Workers
Interdistrict
Direct
Feeder
Express
Fig. 7-26, p. 152