Study Guides
Big Picture
Populations are groups of the same species. Populations make up communities and have many factors that can influence
their population size, population density, and population distribution. A populations rate of growth reflects how healthy
the group of organisms is. The equation r=(b+i)-(d+e) displays the factors that impact r (the growth rate).
Key Terms
Population: Refers to a group of organisms of the
Dispersal: When offspring move away from their
same species that lives in the same area.
Population Size: The number of of individuals in a
parents.
Migration: The regular movement of individuals or
population.
Population Density: The individuals that make up the
populations every year during certain seasons.
Exponential Growth: Pattern of population growth in
population size per unit area or volume.
which a population starts out growing slowly but
Population Distribution: How the individuals in a
grows faster as population size increases.
population are distributed throughout their habitat.
Logistic Growth: Pattern of population growth in
Age-Sex Structure: The number of individuals of each
which growth slows and population size levels off
sex and age in the population.
Population Pyramid: A bar graph that represents
as the population approaches the carrying capacity.
Carrying Capacity: Represented by the variable (K),
age-sex structure.
carrying capacity is the largest population size a
Survivorship Curve: A line graph that represents the
number of individuals alive at each age.
niche can support without being harmed.
K-Selected Species: Species that live in a stable
Population Growth Rate (r): How fast a population
environment, in which their population growth is
changes in size over time.
Immigration: When part of a population joins another
Biology
Population
controlled by density-dependent factors.
r-Selected Species: Species that live in an unstable
population elsewhere.
environment, in which their population is uncon-
Emigration: When part of a population leaves to go
trolled and rapid.
elsewhere.
Size, Density, & Distribution
Populations make up communities and act as a unit
of natural selection and evolution. Its health can be
measured by how large it is and how fast it is growing.
Population Growth Rate
The population growth rate (r) gives us an idea on
how fast a population changes over time. The rate can be
calculated with this equation:
r=(b+i)-(d+e)
Population size influences the chances of a species
surviving or on the brink of being extinct. Very small
populations generally are at the greatest risk of
extinction.
r = population growth rate
b = birth rate
i = immigration rate
d = death rate
e = emigration rate
Population
density reflects how crowded the
population is. A large population density means
there is a lot of individuals living in the area.
Generally
rate (b) and the death rate (d).
Immigration rate (i) also reflects individuals entering
the population from somewhere else.
rate (e) reflects individuals leaving the
population to go somewhere else.
If the population growth rate is positive, the population
is increasing. If the rate is negative, the population is
decreasing.
Emigration
Think of immigration as coming in, emigration as
exiting.
There are other factors that can affect population size
and growth:
Dispersal
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prevents competition with the parents for
resources.
Migration changes population size in a regular
pattern. The purpose of migration is generally to find
food, mates, or other resources.
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v1.1.11.2012
Disclaimer: this study guide was not created to replace
your textbook and is for classroom or individual use only.
individuals in a population are not
spread out evenly in the area. The population
distribution looks to see how the individuals are
spread throughout their habitat. Organisms may be:
A population growth rate is most affected by the birth
Biology
Population
cont .
Population Growth
Population growth reflects the changes in the
size of the population over time.
The
age-sex structure will influence population growth. Younger people are more
likely to reproduce, so a large number of
younger people may result in a large number of births, increasing the population.
Older people have a higher rate of dying, so
a large number of older people may result
in a decrease in population.
The
age-sex structure can be shown in a
population pyramid.
Survivorship curves show how deaths affect
populations. You may see one of these three
types of curves:
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Type
I: Parents provide care to a few offspring, which allows them to grow into
adulthood and reproduce. Type I usually
describes mammals, such as humans.
Type
II: Parents produce a moderate number of offspring and provide some care, but
deaths occur more uniformly throughout life
than type I. This describes asexual species
and animals like birds.
Type
III: Parents produce a large number
of offspring but provide little care. This results with most of the offspring dying at a
relatively young age. Type III is typical of
plants, invertebrates, and fish.
Figure. Survivorship curves for Type l (humans), Type ll
(songbirds), and type lll (frogs).
Image Credit: CK-12 Foundation, CC-BY-NC-SA 3.0
Patterns of Population Growth
Types of population growth pattern:
Exponential
growth (curve A in the graph): When a
populations initial growth is slow, but the population
size increases as the growth rate increases. The larger
the population, the faster it grows. On a line graph, exponential growth forms a J-shape.
The
lower part of the exponential growth curve
represents r-selected species, whose population
growth is uncontrolled and rapid.
Logistic
growth (curve B in the graph): When a
population begins to grow exponentially, but as the
population encounters factors that limit its growth, it
starts to level off. On a line graph, logistic growth forms
a S shape. The carrying capacity (K) limits the amount
a population can grow, so the curve will start to level off
near the carrying capacity.
Logistic
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growth describes K-selected species. Kselected species are generally close or at the carrying capacity.