POPULATION GROWTH Why do populations rise or fall in particular places?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Population Chapter 2 An Introduction to Human Geography
Advertisements

Population Theories Demographic Transition Model
 The Demographic Transition  1. Low growth– 3. Moderate growth  2. High growth– 4. Low growth  Population pyramids  Age distribution  Sex ratio 
Demographic Transition Model. Why is population increasing at different rates in different countries?
Where has the world’s population increased?
Chapter 2-Population 9/15-16/09.
Chapter Two Population.
The Demographic Transition Blowin’ Up, yo.. Most of Humanity’s history on Earth has occurred during stage 1. Humans survived by hunting and gathering.
Key Issue 2: Why Do Populations Rise & Fall in Particular Places?
Demographic Transition Model (DTM)
Why is Population Increasing at Different Rates in Different Countries? Key Issue #3.
Key Issue 3: Variations in Population Growth
AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY CHAPTER 5 CLASS NOTES
The Demographic Transition
Chapter 2: Population Key Issue 3.
Why Is Population Increasing at Different Rates in Different Countries?
Population Chapter 2.
Section 1: Studying Human Populations
SEV5: Objectives 9.1 Describe how the size and growth rate of the human population has changed in the last 200 years. Define four properties that scientists.
“People are not distributed uniformly across Earth’s surface.”
Topic: Population Pyramids Aim: What can the analysis of Population Pyramids reveal about a country?
Chapter 2 Key Issue 3 Why Is Population Increasing at Different Rates in Different Countries?
Population Geography or Geodemography National Geographic.
Population. Part 1: Where is everyone? What is population distribution?
POPULATION Chapter 2 H. J. deBlij.
3.1.4 Demographic Transition. Demographic Transition Growth rate (percent)
Population Pyramids. Population Pyramids = Typical pyramid shape during the 1800’s. What does this mean????
Do Now: Population Pyramids Movie Clip
Ch. 2 Population Section #1.
Why is Global Population Increasing? Chapter 2 Key Issue 2.
POPULATION & MIGRATION AP HuG Unit 2 (Chapters 2 & 3)
CHAPTER 11: HUMAN POPULATIONS Read pgs Key Concepts  Factors affecting human population size  Managing population growth  Human population.
Chapter 3 Key Issue 3 Why is population increasing at different rates in different countries?
Chapter 2 Lecture Population and Health The Cultural Landscape Eleventh Edition Matthew Cartlidge University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
Chapter 9-1.  Study of populations, usually human  Demographers study historical size and makeup of various world populations to make predictions about.
Studying Human Populations
POPULATION ISSUES Population has grown from 1 billion in 1800 to over 6 (7) billion today. 80% of the world’s population lives in LDC’s 90% of the world’s.
Chapter 3 Key Issue 3 Why is population increasing at different rates in different countries?
A MEASURE OF GROWTH AT DIFFERENT STAGES Demographic Transition Model (DTM)
Chapter Five Processes and Cycles of Population Change.
The most significant implication of population growth is The most rapid growth is occurring in LDC.
Our numbers expand, but Earth’s natural systems do not Lester R. Brown.
POPULATION & MIGRATION AP HuG Unit 2 (Chapters 2 & 3)
Review What is the current world population? What is the current world population? Why is Physiological density a better way of calculating population.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.  Components of Population Growth  Geographers measure population change in a country or the world as a whole by using.
Population Measures Courtesy of NASA. Will the World Face an Overpopulation Problem? Malthus on overpopulation –Population growth & food supply –Malthus’
POPULATION Chapter 2 H. J. deBlij. Where in the World Do People Live and Why? Arithmetic population density: Measure of total population relative to land.
Chapter 2 Key Issue 2 Chapter 2 Key Issue 2 Where has the world’s population increased?
POPULATION ISSUES Population has grown from 1 billion in 1800 to over 6 (7) billion today. 80% of the world’s population lives in LDC’s 90% of the world’s.
Chapter 2: Population. Distribution-geographers are concerned about the arrangement of features on the earth’s surface. 3 main properties of distribution.
CHAPTER 2: POPULATION KEY ISSUE #3 WHY IS POPULATION INCREASING AT DIFFERENT RATES IN DIFFERENT COUNTRIES?
Chapter 7 The Human Population. Scientists Disagree on Earth’s Carrying Capacity Figure 7.1.
What to do: Get out writing sheet from last week. Get prepped for notes.
Chapter 2 Population Key Issue 3: Variations in Population Growth.
Chapter 2 Population. Key Issue 1 Where Is the World’s Population Distributed?
Objectives Describe how the size and growth rate of the human population has changed in the last 200 years. Define four properties that scientists use.
Ch. 2 The Demographic Transition and Population Pyramids
Chapter 2 Key Issue 3 Why Is Population Increasing at Different Rates in Different Countries?
Chapter 7 - Human Population Ecology
HANS ROSLING. HANS ROSLING The Demographic Transition A model with four stages that helps to explain the rise and fall of pop’n growth rates over.
Topic: The Demographic Transition Model
Unit 2- Population, Health, and Migration
Objectives Describe how the size and growth rate of the human population has changed in the last 200 years. Define four properties that scientists use.
Key Issues Where is the world population distributed? Why is global population increasing? Why does population growth vary among regions? Why do some regions.
Why Does Population Growth Vary among Regions?
Health and Population: Part Two
Unit 2- Population, Health, and Migration
The Human Population.
Chapter 2 Key Issue 3 Why Is Population Increasing at Different Rates in Different Countries?
Key ? 2: Why Do Populations Rise or Fall in Particular Places?
Presentation transcript:

POPULATION GROWTH Why do populations rise or fall in particular places?

Are we in an overpopulation crisis?

Malthusiansism and Neo-Malthusians Thomas Malthus, An Essay on the Principles of Population (1798) Food supplies grow linearly (incrementally) Population grows exponentially (compounding)  We will run out of food! WRONG! Why? Globalization Technology Food production has grown exponentially Neo-Malthusians Overpopulation is the cause of human suffering Look at other resources, not just food

Carrying Capacity: An area’s ability to support it’s population – if this is exceeded we refer to it as overpopulation. Overpopulation exists even in sparsely populated regions. Overpopulation refers to the stress population puts on resources, not the number of people in a region!

Natural increase Crude birth rate (CBR) minus crude death rate (CDR) From the movie: Where in the world are the highest rates of natural increase? Developing countries Misses two key elements of population Immigration Outmigration

NATURAL INCREASE RATE The world average is currently about 1.2 percent. The countries with the highest NIRs are concentrated in Africa and Southwest Asia.

Total Fertility Rate (TFR) Measures the number of births in a country TFR is average number of children a woman will have during her ‘childbearing years’ (approx. ages 15-49) TFR >6 in some African nations What is replacement rate? 2.1 TFR = Keeps population stable (without immigration) When will the world’s TFR fall to 2.2.? 2050 What are the implications? Stable population When will we (probably) reach zero population growth? When birth rate = death rate 2100

Aging Populations What factors reduce the TFR? Birth control Too expensive to have several children Educated women Urbanization A lower TFR leads to a higher average population age Explain that What other factors lead to a higher average population age? Better health care Food security Nutrition and exercise Technology Sanitation Less war/conflict Better work safety Out-migration of youth for job opportunities

Dependency Ratios Which age group is a country dependent upon? Who is dependent on them? A country with an aging population and low TFR will have a problematic old-age dependency ratio Too many dependent old people (over 65) compared to working-age people (15-64) Where? Europe :100 Europe :100 Africa :100 What are the effects? Many African countries have a challenging child-dependency ratio Africa :100 Europe :100

The Demographic Transition Model Four stages 1.high birth and death rates 2.declines first in death rates 3.then declines in birth rates 4.finally to a stage of low birth and death rates Fifth stage? negative population growth Every country is in one of these stages Irreversible process – once a country moves from one stage to another, it can’t go back.

Stage 1: Low Growth Most of Earth’s history spent in this stage However, no country remains there today Hunting/gathering nomadic peoples NIR about zero approx. ½ million people High birth & death rates 8000 B.C. - Agrarian (aka- Agricultural, Neolithic) Revolution caused increase in population However, climate/war/disease caused CDR to rise

Stage 2: High Growth 1750 A.D. - population grew 10X faster than in previous years due to… Industrial Revolution CDR decreases, why? improvements in health, sanitation, and food supplies - people living longer CBR remains the same as Stage 1  NIR is high, population increases Lower child mortality rate, age structure becomes more youthful Stage did not diffuse to Africa, Asia, or Latin America until around 1950 (150 years after Europe & North America)

Stage 3: Moderate Growth CBR drops severely - people have fewer children for various reasons CDR continues to fall, but at a slower rate than Stage 2 Population grows because CBR still greater than CDR NIR is smaller than in Stage 2 due to smaller gap between CBR and CDR Malaysia

Stage 3: Moderate Growth (continued)… Europe & North America made this transition in the first half of the 20th Century Asian, Latin America moved in recent years Most of Africa is still in Stage 2

Stage 4: Low Growth CBR declines to where it equals CDR NIR approaches zero Zero Population Growth (ZPG) Women in this stage enter labor force rather than remaining home Birth control more available

Stage 5 TFR significantly below replacement level Elderly population > youthful population No countries in it YET…

Limitations of the DTM Exceptions to the rule FOR ANY MODEL DTM doesn’t tell us: Impact of other demographic variables Migration How long a country will be in each stage

Demographic Momentum Even after TFR decreases, population still continues to grow rapidly for several years Why would this happen? (remember Hans and his boxes!) Why would this happen?

Population Pyramids A way to visualize the population composition of a country (or other place) Organized by gender and age range Males are on left, females on right. Youngest people on base of pyramid and older people at the top The shape of a country’s population pyramid tell a lot about the country E.g., a country’s stage in demographic transition gives it a distinctive population structure

Each 5 year group with the youngest 0-4 years old at the base of the pyramid are called cohorts. A wide-based pyramid indicates a country in Stage 2 of the Demographic transition.

For wealthier countries, the chart is shaped like a lopsided vase. Population is aging, TFRs are declining.

For poorer countries, the chart is shaped like a pyramid. Infant mortality rates are high, life expectancy is shorter.

Four Patterns of Population Structure Each nation faces different problems

POPULATION PYRAMIDS FOR THE UNITED STATES AND SELECTED U.S. COMMUNITIES Laredo has a broad pyramid, indicating higher percentages of young people and fertility rates. Lawrence has a high percentage of people in their twenties because it is the home of the University of Kansas. Naples has a high percentage of elderly people, especially women, so its pyramid is upside down.

Population of Germany, 1989 Germany’s population profile is that of a wealthy core country that has passed through the post war baby boom and has a low birthrate. Note the impact of the losses of World War I and World War II.

JAPAN’S CHANGING POPULATION PYRAMIDS Japan’s population pyramid has shifted from a broad base in 1950 to a rectangular shape. In the future, the bottom of the pyramid is expected to contract and the top to expand.

Slow Growth: A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model Large number of “older people” Smaller % of young people

No Growth: End of stage 4, entering Stage 5 Large number of “older people” Very small % of young people

Affect of AIDS on population pyramid for South Africa. Predicted population for 2035, without and with AIDS. With AIDS, looks like a population “chimney.”

1995 Population Pyramids reflect the economic prosperity of Western Europe and the less developed countries of Sub- Saharan Africa. In the mid-1990s almost 50% of Africa’s population was under 15 years of age. By contrast the number of people 65 and older in Western Europe is 5 times that of sub-Saharan Africa.

FRQ 2010 #3