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Page 2: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Human Population Expansion and Its Cause

• Reasons for the patterns of growth– Biotic potential exceeds environmental

resistance: birth rates exceed death rates

• There are 7.1 billion people on Earth• If each one stood up, pronounced their

name and sat down– It would take 600 years to complete roll call– By 2025 it will take 1,000 years to complete

this exercise

Page 3: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

HUMAN POPULATIONS

• Every second, on average, 4-5 children are born somewhere on earth. In that same second, 2 other people die. This difference between births and deaths means a net gain of nearly 2.5 people per second in the world’s population.

– 9000 people per hour– 214,000 people per day– 78 million per year

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World Population Over the Centuries

9,000 human beings added to the planet every hour

Page 5: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

World’s Human Population

• The human population hit 1 million about 15,000 years ago.

• The human population hit 1 billion in 1804.– 3 billion in 1960 ( 150 years to add 2 billion)– 1 billion people add between 1987-1999

• This means our population will double in about 40 years.

Page 6: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

What is Exponential Growth?

• Which would you choose?

2 million dollars or

1 penny on day one and then double it each

day for 30 days.

Page 7: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Exponential Grwoth

0

1000000

2000000

3000000

4000000

5000000

6000000

1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29

Days

Money Series1

Series2

$5,368,709.12

0.01 1

0.02 2

0.04 3

0.08 4

0.16 5

0.32 6

0.64 7

1.28 8

2.56 9

5.12 10

10.24 11

20.48 12

40.96 13

81.92 14

163.84 15

327.68 16

655.36 17

1310.72 18

2621.44 19

5242.88 20

10485.76 21

20971.52 22

41943.04 23

83886.08 24

167772.16 25

335544.32 26

671088.64 27

1342177.28 28

2684354.56 29

5368709.12 30

Page 8: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Exponential Growth

• Exponential growth is marked by doubling. A few doublings can lead quickly to enormous numbers.

• It is deceptive because it starts out slowly, but rapidly gets out of hand.

Exponential Grwoth

0

1000000

2000000

3000000

4000000

5000000

6000000

1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29

Days

Money Series1

Series2

Page 9: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Growth Rate- includes birth rate, death rate, immigration and emigration

Doubling time- The time it takes for the population to double the number of people

Page 10: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

What influences Growth rate?• Crude birth rate – the

number of births per thousand people.

• Crude death rate – the number of deaths per thousand people.

– If they are equal, there is zero population growth.

– If births is higher than deaths, then the pop. goes up.

– Life expectancy – The average number of years someone is expected to live.

Page 11: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Calculating Fertility Rates and Doubling Times

(CBR - CDR)/1000 x 100 = % Rate of Increase or decrease in population per 1000 per year

70/ Rate of Increase = Doubling Time

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Page 13: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Reasons for the Human Population Explosion

• Causes of disease recognized• Improvements in nutrition• Discovery of antibiotics• Improvements in medicine• Increase in number of women who actually

reach child-bearing age• Short doubling times in some countries

Page 14: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Factors Affecting Death Rates• Death rates have declined because of:

– Increased food supplies, better nutrition.– Advances in medicine.– Improved sanitation and personal hygiene.– Safer water supplies.

• U.S. infant mortality is higher than it could be (ranked 46th world-wide) due to:– Inadequate pre- and post-natal care for poor.– Drug addiction.– High teenage birth rate.

Page 15: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Infant mortality rate- Number of child/infant deaths.

If a mother lives in an area with a high infant mortality rate

she will tend to have a lot of children to ensure some will

make it to adulthood.

Page 16: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Zero Population Growth- When the number of births, equals the number

of deaths. No growth in the population.

Total Fertility Rate- an estimate of the average number of children a

women will have during her childbearing years.

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Replacement-level fertility- the number of children a couple must bear to replace themselves. It is slightly higher than two children per couple. (2.2 in developed countries and as high as 2.5 in some developing countries)

It is greater in countries w/ high infant mortality rates than in countries w/ low infant mortality rates

Page 18: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Factors Affecting Birth Rates and Fertility Rates

• The number of children women have is affected by:– The cost of raising and educating them.– Availability of pensions.– Urbanization.– Education and employment opportunities.– Infant deaths.– Marriage age.– Availability of contraception and abortion.– Importance of kids in labor force– Religious beliefs, traditions & cultural norms

Page 19: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Fig. 9-3, p. 174

Average crude death rate

Average crude birth rate

World21

9

All developedcountries

11

10

All developingcountries

27

8

9

23

Developingcountries

(w/o China)

Page 20: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection
Page 21: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Other factors that influence a countries population

• Immigration – the migration or movement of people into a country or area to take up permanent residence.

• Emigration – the migration or movement of people from a country.

• Net Migration- Total number of people moving into or out of the population.

Page 22: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Reasons to Immigrate

1. Work2. Money3. Political Safety4. Freedom of Religion5. To Escape War 6. Famine7. For a Better Education8. Different Government9. Tolerance

• Usually people immigrate to start a better life for them or their families. Some come alone in hope that they can soon bring the rest of their family. Others work so they can send money to help those where they came from.

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Growth Rate

Page 24: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

FACTORS AFFECTING HUMAN POPULATION SIZE

• Population increases because of births and immigration and decreases through deaths and emigration.

• Instead of using raw numbers, crude birth rates and crude death rates are used (based on total number of births or deaths per 1,000 people in a population).

Page 25: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Demographics

• Demography – Keeps track of human populations. The data collected is used to show age structures (number of people in various age brackets), and is separated by gender (male and female). Population profiles (graphs) are used to determine age structures (proportions of people in each age bracket), and are used to make predictions of future population trends.

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Demographics

• A demographer studies vital statistics about people, such as birth rates, death rates, where they live, as well as population size.

• They compare country to country, state to state, region to region.

• They can predict trends that can be important to plan the future.

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Demographics

• They study the populations of developed countries and non-developed countries.– Developed countries are those that are

industrialized and/or have high standards of living.

– Less-developed countries are those that have very little industrialization and/or low standards of living.

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Demographics

• Developed– High literacy rates– High standards of living– Low birth rate– Low death rate– Slow or Zero population

growth– High life expectancy– Rich– High per capita– High Energy Consumption– Urban populations

• Less-Developed– Low literacy rates– Low standard of living– High birth rate– High death rate– Rapid population growth– Low life expectancy– Poor– Widespread Disease– Low per capita– Rural populations

Page 29: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Economic Categories Based on Per Capita Gross National Income

• Gross National Product- The most commonly used measure of the economic growth of a country.

– Capita:the value of all products and services generated within a country in one year

• Gross National Income Per Capita: GNP + net income received from other countries

– low income, $1,005 or less

– lower middle income $1,006 - $3,975

– upper middle income, $3,976 - $12,275

– high income, $12,276 or more.

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Per Capita Gross National Income

Developed

• High-income, highly developed, industrialized – Europe, Japan, US,

Canada

– Average GNI per capita = $26,710

– US = $47,140

– Wealthiest = Monoco ($197,460)

Moderately Developed

• Low-income, under developed countries, non-industrialized – Central Asia, Middle

East and Sub-Saharan Africa

– Average GNI per capita = $430

– Poorest = Burundi ($160)

Page 31: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Major Economic Divisions of the World

Gross national income/capita

Page 32: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

The Poverty Cycle

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Disparities

• Developed countries– 15% of the world’s population– Control 80% of the world’s wealth

• Low-income developing countries– 37% of the world’s population– Control 3.0% of the world’s gross national

income

• Difference in per capita income: 63 to 1!

Page 35: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Dimensions of the Human Poverty Index

Page 36: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Poor (less developed) countries have high population growth rates therefore, high populations.

More developed (richer) countries have little or no population growth.

Page 37: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Histograms• These population histograms show the

age distribution and help predict the age dist. for the future.

10 years later

Page 38: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

• The age structure histogram below shows the percentage of population for both male (left) and female (right) for three nations, Mexico (rapid growth), U.S. (slow growth) and Sweden (zero growth). The shaded areas on each graph show people in their child bearing years.

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Page 40: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

What is the growth rate?

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Age structure- Percentage of the population at each age

level in a population

Generation time- the time it takes for 1 generation to pass.

Page 42: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE

• The number of people in young, middle, and older age groups determines how fast populations grow or decline.

• The number of people younger than age 15 is the major factor determining a country’s population growth.

• Changes in the distribution of a country’s age groups have long-lasting economic and social impacts.

Page 43: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE

• Populations with a large proportion of its people in the preproductive ages 1-14 have a large potential for rapid population growth.

Figure 9-9Figure 9-9

Page 44: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Population Profile of Italy

Page 45: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

U.S. Statistics• Because of the ‘Baby Boom’ the US

has a bulge in the pyramid with people in their 50’s-60’s.

• There are also more women than men in the older age group because of differences in longevity between the sexes.

(Cont…)

Page 46: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE

• Today, baby boomers make up nearly half of all adult Americans and dominate the populations demand for goods and services.

Figure 9-11Figure 9-11

Page 47: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE

• About 14% of the world’s population live in countries with stabilizing or declining populations.

• Rapid population decline can lead to long-lasting economic and social problems.

• Death from AIDS can disrupt a country’s social and economic structure by removing significant numbers of young adults.

Page 48: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE

• Some problems with rapid population decline.

• Which of these problems do you believe are the most important?

Figure 9-13Figure 9-13

Page 49: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Population Profile United States

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Population Profile United States

Page 51: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Population Profile United States•US Population Growth Histogram

Page 52: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

SOLUTIONS: INFLUENCING POPULATION SIZE

• Demographic Transition: As countries become economically developed, their birth and death rates tend to decline.– Preindustrial stage: little population growth

due to high infant mortality.– Transitional stage: industrialization begins,

death rates drops and birth rates remain high.– Industrial stage: birth rate drops and

approaches death rate.

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Population Density

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Page 57: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Population Density

Page 59: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Do you think our world can handle this many people?

• Carrying capacity – The maximum number of individual species that can be supported by an ecosystem on a long term basis.

Page 60: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Carrying Capacity

• At this point, the environment can no longer provide for the species, due to a number of different environmental resistances, including food, crowding, competition, etc. The population, due to lack of resources, will begin to die out, allowing the environment to recover. As the environment recovers, the species population is able to flourish once more. This leads to a fluctuation between the prosperity of the species and the prosperity of the environment (hence the fluctuations in the graph). 

Page 61: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Human predictions

• If there was a continued growth and not death, food would run short and available space would run out.

• But, humans can’t reproduce as fast as other animals.

• This helps to stop the growth.

Page 62: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Effects of Overpopulation?

• Food Shortage - famine

• Natural resources shortage

• Land Overuse• War• Disease• Pollution-waste

management

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Consequences of Exploding Populations

More PopulationCauses

MORE

LESS

deforestationresource depletionloss of agricultural landbiodiversitydiseasepest resistancepopulation migrationirrigationwetlands

Page 66: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Reasons for World Hunger Issues

• Unequal distribution of available food

• Loss of arable land

• Increasing population growth rate

• Increasing poverty in developing countries

Page 67: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Strategies for ensuring adequate nutrition for a growing population:

• Increase the number of new food crops from a diversity of plant species

• Distribute food more equitably• Increase land area that is dedicated to

grain production rather than meat production

• Assist developing countries in efficient crop irrigation systems.

Page 68: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

HUMAN ASPECTS ON NATURAL SYSTEMS

• We have used technology to alter much of the rest of nature in ways that threaten the survival of many other species and could reduce the quality of life for our own species.

Figure 9-17Figure 9-17

Page 69: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Different Populations, Different Problems

• IPAT Formula: calculates human pressure on the environment (I = P x A x T)– I = environmental impact– P = population– A = affluence and consumptive patterns– T = level of technology in the society

Page 70: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Different Populations, Different Problems

• Environmental impact of developing countries due to “P.”

• Environmental impact of developed countries due to “A” and “T.”– Both have some measure of “I” for different

reasons.– Average American places at least 20 times

the demand on Earth’s resources compared to a person in Bangladesh.

Page 71: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Different Populations, Different Problems

• How does stewardship (S) affect the IPAT formula?– S = wildlife conservation, pollution control,

energy conservation, and recycling

I = P x A x TS

Page 72: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Developed Countries

• High rates of resource use result in high levels of pollution and environmental degradation per person

• These are believed to be the key factors determining overall environmental impact.

(Cont….)

Page 73: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

It is estimated that a US citizen consumes 35 X’s as much as the average citizen of India and 100 X’s as much as the average person in the world’s poorest countries.Thus, poor parents in a developing country would need 70-200 kids to have the same lifetime environmental impact as 2 typical US kids.

Page 74: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Urban areas must import most of its food, water, energy, minerals, & other resources.

They produce enormous quantities of wastes that can pollute the air, water & land.

44% of the world’s people live in urban areas that occupy only 5% of the world’s land & they consume 75% of the world’s resources.

Page 75: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Core Case Study: Is the World Overpopulated?

• The world’s population is projected to increase from 6.6 billion to 8.9 billion between 2006 and 2050.

• The debate over interactions among population growth, economic growth, politics, and moral beliefs is one of the most important and controversial issues in environmental science.

Page 76: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Core Case Study: Is the World Overpopulated?

• Some argue that the planet has too many people.

• Some feel that the world can support billions of more people due to technological advances.

• There is a constant debate over the need to reduce population growth.– Must consider moral, religious, and personal

freedom.

Page 77: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Population Control

• Psychological/Behavioral: abstention, calendar rhythm method

• Mechanical: condoms, diaphragms

• Chemical: the pill, Norplant

• Surgical: tubal ligation, vasectomy

• Intrauterine Devices (IUD): abortion device

• An important example of mandated population control is China's one-child policy, in which having more than one child is made extremely unattractive. This has led to allegations that practices like infanticide, forced abortions, and forced sterilization are used as a result of the policy.

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China’s Family Planning Program

• Currently, China’s TFR is 1.6 children per women.

• China has moved 300 million people out of poverty.

• Problems:– Strong male preference leads to gender

imbalance.– Average population age is increasing.– Not enough resource to support population.

Page 82: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

Some countries, including China, penalize couples who have more than one or two children by:

1. Raising their taxes

2. Charging other fees

3. Eliminating income tax deductions for a couple’s third child

4. Loss of health-care benefits, food allotments and job options

Page 83: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

In China couples who pledge to have no more than one child receive

1. Extra food

2. Larger pensions

3. Better housing

4. Free medical care

5. Salary bonuses

6. Free school tuition for their one child

7. Preferential treatment in employment when their child enters the job market.

Page 84: HUMAN POPULATIONS World Population Clock Population Ranks U.S. POP Clock Projection

India’s Failed Family Planning Program

• Poor planning.• Bureaucratic inefficiency.• Low status of women.• Extreme poverty.• Lack of administrative financial support.• Disagreement over the best ways to

slow population growth.

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Putting It All Together: Social Modernization