Title: The Human Population
1The Human Population
Applying the principles of population dynamics
and sustainability to the growth of the human
population
2Current Population Trends
- World population 7.18 billion in 2013
- Amplifies all environmental problems
- Largest increase expected in developing countries
(approximately 97) - Decreasing in some developed countries
- Rate actually decreased between 1963-2004, but
the population has still doubled from 3.2 6.4
billion
3Rate 80 million new people/year New York City
every month Germany every year United States
every 3.7 years
4Population projections For the next 20 years
5- Total Fertility Rate (TFR) - Number of children a
woman has during her lifetime, averaged for
population. - same as biotic potential (r)
- Replacement Level Fertility - Number of children
needed to replace everyone in the population. - Varies between regions
- 2.1 with low infant mortality
- 2.5 with high infant mortality
- Zero Population Growth - Birth rate equals death
rate.
6Sex Ratio - Age Distribution
- Sex Ratio- Relative number of males and females
in a population - Age Distribution - Number of individuals of each
age in a population - Together they tell how a population will grow
7Population Age Structure
Developing Countries
Developed Countries
Growth is determined by teenagers the
population wave of the future. 30 of popn lt15
years 1.9 billion more into reproductive years.
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9Population Trend Comparisons
- Developed Countries
- Low infant mortality rate
- Life expectancy 77 years
- Total fertility rate 2.0
- 21 population lt15
- 12 population gt65
- Per capita GDP 36,110
- Developing Countries
- High infant mortality rate
- Life expectancy 52 years
- Total fertility rate 5.7
- 44 population lt15
- 3 population gt65
- Per capita GDP 800
10Human Population Issue
- Several factors determine the impact of a society
on natural resources. - Population size
- Population density
- Degree of technological development
- Demography - Study of populations and their
characteristics. - Larger ecological footprint in U.S. than in
developing countries. Why?
11Environmental Impact
12The fertility rates have significantly fallen
since 1950.
13U.S. Birth Rates 1910-2004
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18Demographic Transition
As countries become industrialized, death rates,
then birth rates decline.
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20- Major social factor determining family size is
the role of women in society. - Early marriages foster high fertility rates.
- Lack of education opportunities for women reduces
their options. - When level of education increases, fertility
rates fall. - The most important factor is the ability of women
to control the size of their family.
21Case Study Slowing Population Growth in China
- Economic incentives (food, large pensions, better
housing, salary bonuses, free schooling) - Free medical care
- Free sterilization
- Locally administered
- Very intrusive and coercive
- Problem with parents selecting for males
- Fertility rate decreased from 5.7 in 1972 to 1.7
in 2004.
22Global Megacities
Number of large cities growing. Worlds urban
population will increase from 3.1 billion to 5
billion from 2004-2030.
23URBANIZATION- urban sprawl
- Using up land to build bigger cities
- Results in
- -Loss of crop land and animal habitats
- - Loss of wetlands
- -DEFORESTATION
24Problems include -Lower food production, -Less
oxygen production, -Less filters for
pollution, -More erosion- can lead to
DESERTIFICATION
25Increased impervious surfaces means more
flooding and more heat reflected back to the
atmosphere- GLOBAL WARMING
26HABITAT FRAGMENTATION- makes it difficult for
species to migrate, reproduce
27POLLUTION
28RESOURCES
- Fossil Fuels
- Oil
- Coal
- Gas
- Metal
29And a larger ecological footprint
30POLLUTION in the FOOD CHAIN
- Some pollutants can be magnified as you move up
the food chain and cause problems. - Example- DDT used as an insecticide
31BIODIVERSITY
- Total of all the genetically variations (DNA) in
all the organisms in the biosphere - Why is this important?
- Medicine
- Antibiotics
32Types of biodiversity
- ECOSYSTEM DIVERSITY- different habitats
- SPECIES DIVERSITY- estimated over 30 million
- GENETIC DIVERSITY- all the DNA in a species or
communtiy
33ECOLOGICAL HOT SPOTS
- Place where many species and habitats are in
danger of extinction
34LIMITING FACTORS
- Something that controls the growth of a
population - Examples-
35DENSITY DEPENDENT LIMITING FACTORS
- Affect larger populations much more than smaller
populations
36DENSITY INDEPENDENT LIMITING FACTORS
- Affect all populations regardless of size