Visualizing Environmental Science

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Population Ecology 161

The growth rate (r) of a local population must take into
account birth rate (b), death rate (d ), immigration (i ),
and emigration (e) (Figure 7.2b). The growth rate equals
(birth rate minus death rate) plus (immigration minus
emigration):

r = (b – d) + (i – e)

Maximum Population Growth
Different species have different biotic potentials (also
called intrinsic rates of increase). Several factors influ-
ence the biotic potential of a species: the age at which
reproduction begins, the fraction
of the life span during which an
individual can reproduce, the
number of reproductive periods
per lifetime, and the number of
offspring produced during each
period of reproduction. These factors, called life history
characteristics, determine whether a particular species has
a large or a small biotic potential.
Generally, larger organisms, such as blue whales and
elephants, have the smallest biotic potentials, whereas
micro organisms have the greatest biotic potentials.
Under ideal conditions (that is, in an environment with
unlimited resources), certain bacteria reproduce by
dividing in half every 30 minutes. At this rate of growth,
a single bacterium increases to a population of more
than 1 million in just 10 hours and exceeds 1 billion in
15 hours. If you plot bacterial population numbers ver-
sus time, the graph takes on the characteristic J shape of

How Do Populations Change in Size?


Populations of organisms, whether sunflowers, eagles,
or humans, change over time. On a global scale, this
change is due to two factors: the rate at which individual
organisms produce offspring (the birth rate) and the
rate at which individual organisms die (the death rate)
(Figure 7.2a). In humans, the birth rate (b) is usually
expressed as the number of births
per 1000 people per year and the
death rate (d) as the number of
deaths per 1000 people per year.
The growth rate (r) of a popula-
tion is the birth rate (b) minus the
death rate (d):


r = b – d

Growth rate is also referred to as natural increase in
human populations.
If more individuals in a population are born than
die, the growth rate is more than zero, and population
size increases. If more individuals in a population die
than are born, the growth rate is less than zero, and pop-
ulation size decreases. If the growth rate is equal to zero,
births and deaths match, and population size is station-
ary, despite continued reproduction and death.
In addition to birth and death rates, dispersal—move-
ment from one region or country to another— affects
local populations. There are two types of dispersal:
immigration (i), in which individuals enter a popula-
tion and increase its size, and emigration (e), in which
individuals leave a population and decrease its size.


growth rate (r)
The rate of change
(increase or decrease)
of a population’s
size, expressed in
percentage per year.
biotic potential
The maximum rate at
which a population
could increase under
ideal conditions.

Global
population Local
population

Increase population:


Births Deaths

Decrease population: Increase population: Decrease population:

Births Deaths

Immigration Emigration

a. On a global scale, the change in a population is
due to the number of births and deaths.


b. In local populations, such as the population of
the United States, the number of births, deaths,
immigrants, and emigrants affects population size.

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