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Ecology 1.2 E Populations. Populations   Organisms living in the wild do not always have enough food or living space.   Competition occurs when two.

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Presentation on theme: "Ecology 1.2 E Populations. Populations   Organisms living in the wild do not always have enough food or living space.   Competition occurs when two."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ecology 1.2 E Populations

2 Populations   Organisms living in the wild do not always have enough food or living space.   Competition occurs when two or more organisms seek the same resource at the same time.   Competition limits population size.

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4 Populations   In nature, the most intense competition is usually among individuals of the same species, because they need the same kinds of food and shelter.   Competition also takes place among different species.   The number of individuals of one species per a specific area is called population density.

5 Tokyo Japan New York City

6 CityTotal PopulationPopulation Density (#/km 2 ) New York City8,175,13310,356 Los Angeles3,792,6212,940 Chicago2,695,5984,447 Mumbai12,478,44720,694 Tokyo8,887,60814,400 Mexico City8,873,0175,973 Shanghai17,836,1336,845

7 Populations   Ecologists can have problems when measuring wildlife populations.   One of the methods they use is called trap-mark-release.   To estimate the number of rabbits in an area of 100 acres, for example, you could count the rabbits in one acre and multiply by 100 to estimate the population size.

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9 Populations   A limiting factor is anything that restricts the number of individuals in a population.   Limiting factors include living and nonliving features of the ecosystem.   A limiting factor can affect more than one population in a community.   Carrying capacity is the largest number of individuals of one species that an ecosystem can support over time.

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12 Populations   Birthrates and death rates also influence the size of a population and its rate of growth.   In countries with faster population growth, birthrates are much higher than death rates.   Many bird species move from one place to another during their annual migrations.   When a species moves into a new area with plenty of food, living space, and other resources, the population grows quickly, in a pattern called exponential growth.

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14 Populations  Limiting Factor  Carrying Capacity  Trap-Mark Release


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