i. i.population dynamics - history b. b.demographic transition in recent years death rates in many...

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I. Population Dynamics - History B. Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social and economic changes that will supposedly lead to stable populations is unclear Some neo-Malthusians pessimistic that transition to lower birth rates and stable populations will occur Garrett Hardin - “Lifeboat Ethics” Barry Commoner - Anti-Malthusian Main cause of environmental degradation is inappropriate use of technology, not simple population growth Ecologically sound development more important than population control

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Page 1: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

I. Population Dynamics - History

B. Demographic Transition• In recent years death rates in many developing

nations have decreased• Status of the social and economic changes that will

supposedly lead to stable populations is unclear• Some neo-Malthusians pessimistic that transition to

lower birth rates and stable populations will occur• Garrett Hardin - “Lifeboat Ethics”

• Barry Commoner - Anti-Malthusian• Main cause of environmental degradation is

inappropriate use of technology, not simple population growth

• Ecologically sound development more important than population control

Page 2: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

II. Population Dynamics - Theory

A. Background• Understanding human population dynamics

requires understanding population theory• Earth is a closed system (no immigration/emigration)

• Population size is dynamic equilibrium between• Biotic potential

• Per-capita growth rate (r)• r = b - d (per-capita birth rate - death rate)• r > 0 population growing• r < 0 population shrinking• r = 0 ZPG

Page 3: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

II. Population Dynamics - Theory

A. Background• Instantaneous growth rate of a population may

be represented by dN/dt = rN• dN/dt - Change in population size over time• r - Per-capita growth rate• N - Population size

• Two basic growth models• Density-independent growth• Density-dependent growth

Page 4: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

II. Population Dynamics - Theory

B. Density-Independent Growth• Population growth with unlimited resources• In nature, usually occurs rarely and briefly• Limited by maximum per-capita growth rate for

a species (rmax)• rmax inversely related to generation time

• Ex - Higher for mouse than human

• Population growth rate described by• dN/dt = rmaxN

• Exponential growth

Page 5: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social
Page 6: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

II. Population Dynamics - Theory

B. Density-Independent Growth• Not sustainable indefinitely in the real world

• Assumes/Requires unlimited resources

• Increasing population density limits ability of individuals to acquire resources

• Density affects/limits population growth rate

Page 7: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

II. Population Dynamics - Theory

C. Density-Dependent Growth• Based on idea that a given environment only

can support a limited number of individuals• Carrying capacity (K)

• Population growth described by logistic growth model

• dN/dt = rmaxN (1-N/K)

• Environmental resistance (N/K) increases as N increases

Page 8: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social
Page 9: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social
Page 10: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social
Page 11: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social
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Page 13: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

III. Population Dynamics - Trends

A. Demographics• Global population reached 6 billion in Oct 1999

and 7 billion in Oct 2011• Most population growth currently taking place in

developing nations• Developing nations contain 80% of global population• Percentage of global population growth in developing

nations• 1950 – 85%• Today – 99%

Page 14: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

Roberts 2011

Page 15: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

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1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050

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Page 16: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

III. Population Dynamics - Trends

B. Total Fertility Rate (TFR)• TFR = Fecundity• 2.0 = Replacement level fertility• Global TFR

• 1950 – 5.0• 2010 – 2.45 (51% decrease)

• Africa – 4.37 (Niger – 7.19, Somalia – 6.40)• Asia – 2.18 (India – 2.73, China – 1.64)• N America – 2.04 (Canada – 1.65, Mexico – 2.41,

USA – 2.07)• Europe – 1.59 (Bosnia – 1.18, Germany – 1.36)• PRB Map

Source: UN Population Division

Page 17: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

UN Population DivisionRoberts 2011

Page 18: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

III. Population Dynamics - Trends

C. Infant Mortality Rate (IMR)• Global IMR

• 1950 – 156 deaths per 1000 births (15.6%)• 2010 – 43 deaths per 1000 births (4.30%)

• 72.4% decrease• Europe – 0.7%• Africa – 7.50%

Source: UN Population Division

Page 19: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

III. Population Dynamics - Trends

D. Birth and Death Rates• 1950

• Birth rate – 37 per 1000 people per year• Death rate – 20 per 1000 people per year

• Growth = 17 per 1000 people per year = 1.7%

• 2010• Birth rate – 19.4 per 1000 people per year• Death rate – 8.3 per 1000 people per year

• Growth = 11.1 per 1000 people per year = 1.11%

• Developed nations – 0.23% (0.07 B-D + 0.16 I)• Developing nations – 1.28% (1.33 B-D – 0.05 E)

Source: UN Population Division

Page 20: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

III. Population Dynamics - Trends

E. Age and Life Expectancy• Median Age

• World – 29.4 years (2011)• Developed nations – 39.7 years

• Europe – 40.2 years• N. America – 36.9 years

• Developing nations – 26.8 years• Africa – 19.7 years

• Life Expectancy• 1950 – 46 years• 2010 – 68.9 years

• Africa – 56.0 years (Swaziland – 48.7 years)• Europe – 76.1 years (Andorra – 83.5 years)Source: UN Population Division

Page 21: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

Roberts 2011

Page 22: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

III. Population Dynamics - Trends

F. Population Projections - UN1. Low Variant (TFR: 2.45 1.55 by 2100)

• 2050 – 8.1 billion, 2100 – 6.2 billion

2. Medium Variant (TFR: 2.45 2.03)• 2050 – 9.3 billion, 2100 – 10.1 billion

3. High Variant (TFR: 2.45 2.51)• 2050 – 10.6 billion, 2100 – 15.8 billion

4. Constant Variant (TFR = 2.45 4.44)• 2050 – 10.9 billion, 2100 – 26.8 billion

Page 23: I. I.Population Dynamics - History B. B.Demographic Transition In recent years death rates in many developing nations have decreased Status of the social

Roberts 2011