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Ch 9 – The Human Population

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1 Ch 9 – The Human Population
Section 1 – Studying Human Populations

2 Studying Human Populations – Forecasting Population Size
Demography is the study of the characteristics of populations, especially human populations. - study historical size and makeup of the populations of countries to make comparisons and predictions. - Demographers also study properties that affect population growth -economics and social structure Make predictions about human population

3 Studying Human Populations
Countries with similar population trends are often grouped into two general categories: Developed Developing higher average incomes lower average incomes slower population growth rapid population growth. diverse industrial economies simple and agriculture-based economics stronger social support systems. Weak social support systems

4 The Human Population Over Time
The human population underwent exponential growth in the 1800s -population growth rates increased during each decade. These increases were due to increases in food production and improvements in hygiene -industrial and scientific revolution. However, it is unlikely that the Earth can sustain this growth for much longer.

5 World Population Over Time
Between 1880 and 1930 human population doubled due to the industrial revolution high birth rates and low death rates and improvements in societal infrastructures and services.

6 Forecasting Population size
- 4 Aspects of a population are studied to make a population prediction. Age Structure Survivorship Fertility Rate Migration

7 Age Structure - distribution of ages in a population at certain time
Classification of members of a population into groups according to age -helps demographers make predictions. - Countries with high growth rates usually have more young people than older people - Countries with slow growth or no growth usually have an even distribution of ages

8 Age Structure Age structure can be graphed in a population pyramid (double sided bar graph)

9 Survivorship -Percentage of newborn individuals in a population that can be expected to survive to a given age. - It is used as another way to predict population trends. - To predict survivorship, demographers study a group of people born at the same time - record when each member of the group dies

10 Survivorship Curve - The results of these studies are then plotted on a graph and might look like this  - Type I – most in the population live to be very old - Type II – similar death rate at all ages - Type III – death is more likely to occur at a younger age

11 Fertility Rates - The number of births (per year) per 1,000 women of childbearing age (15 to 44). - Replacement level is the average number of children each parent must have in order to “replace” themselves. - This number is slightly more than 2 - not all children born will survive and reproduce

12 Fertility Rates - In 1972, the total fertility dropped below replacement level for the first time in US History. - Fertility rates remained below replacement level for most of the 1990s - Has been growing recently partly because the children of the baby boom grew up and are having children - Yours and my generation: we are the children of the ‘baby-boomers’ - educated women world wide have lowered birthrates – they learned family planning techniques.

13 Fertility Rates

14 Migration - Any movement of individuals between locations
- Immigration – movement into an area - Emigration – movement out of an area - Populations of many developed countries might decrease without immigration - Migration between and within countries is a significant part of population change.

15 How Many people can live on planet earth?

16 Declining Death Rates - The dramatic increase in Earth’s human population in the last 200 years has happened because death rates have declined more rapidly than birth rates. - Death rates have declined mainly because more people now have access to adequate food, clean water, and safe sewage disposal. - The discovery of vaccines in the 20th century also contributed to the declining death rates.

17 Life Expectancy - Average length of time that an individual is expected to live. - Most affected by infant mortality - the death rate of infants less than a year old. - Expensive medical care is not needed to prevent infant deaths. - Infant health is more affected by the parents’ access to education, food, fuel, and clean water.

18 Life Expectancy - The graph shows that average life expectancy worldwide has increased to more than 67 years old. -New threats, such as tuberculosis and AIDS are arising as populations become denser.

19 The Demographic Transition
- Model of how changes in a population will occur - The general pattern of change from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates - observed in the history of more-developed countries - The theory says industrial development causes economic and social progress that then affects population growth rates.

20 Stages of the Transition

21 Stages of the Transition
Stage 1 – pre-industrial birth and death rate high, pop is stable Stage 2 – death rates decrease, population explosion Stage 3 - social conditions favor smaller families, pop grows slowly, pop stabilizes Stage 4 – birth rate below replacement level – pop decreases

22 Women and Fertility - The factors most clearly related to a decline in birth rates are increasing education and economic independence for women. - Educated women find that they do not need to bear as many children to ensure that some will survive. - They may also learn family planning techniques. Birth Rates have been most affected by increased education and economic independence for women

23 Women and Fertility - Women are able to contribute to their family’s increasing prosperity while spending less energy bearing and caring for children. - As countries modernize, parents are more likely to work away from home. If parents must pay for child care, children may become a financial burden rather than an asset. - All of these reasons contribute to lower birth rates in both developed and developing countries.


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