

Population Density and Distribution
Presentation
•
Biology
•
9th - 12th Grade
•
Hard
Joseph Anderson
FREE Resource
14 Slides • 7 Questions
1
Engage explore/explain 2- Pop. density and dispersion PART 2

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Multiple Choice
What would happen if the apple were removed from the ecosystem?
the flies would keep reproducing because that is a characteristic of all living things
the flies would all die because they need energy (food)
the flies would all die because they need air
the flies would all die because the locker is too hot
4
Population Size
How might biologists track the population size of a species, such as a group of elephants? To accurately track the population over time, they would need to account for four factors: immigration, emigration, births, and deaths.
Immigration and emigration have to do with individuals entering and leaving a population. For example, if a disturbance occurred in a nearby habitat, some elephants might immigrate, or move into, a new population. Then, competition for resources could increase, causing some elephants to move out of the population, or emigrate, to a new area.
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Births and deaths also change a population size over time. Individuals have offspring, which adds more members to the population. Some individuals die each year, which reduces the population.
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7
Multiple Choice
When an organism leaves the ecosystem is is called?
emigration
immigration
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Multiple Choice
What happens when a population has more births than deaths?
no change
it grows
it shrinks
9
Calculating the Growth Rate
The growth rate of a population can be measured with an equation that takes into account these four factors that affect population size:
r = (b + i) – (d + e)
In this equation, r = population growth rate, b = birth rate, i = immigration rate, d = death rate, and e = emigration rate.
We can apply the four factors to our locker ecosystem example. A small population of fruit flies immigrated into the locker in search of food. The population increased due to the birth of a new group of fruit flies. Those flies that did not die when you swatted them in surprise emigrated away from the locker when you threw the apple away.
10
Calculating the Growth Rate
The growth rate of a population can be measured with an equation that takes into account these four factors that affect population size:
r = (b + i) – (d + e)
In this equation, r = population growth rate, b = birth rate, i = immigration rate, d = death rate, and e = emigration rate.
We can apply the four factors to our locker ecosystem example. A small population of fruit flies immigrated into the locker in search of food. The population increased due to the birth of a new group of fruit flies. Those flies that did not die when you swatted them in surprise emigrated away from the locker when you threw the apple away.
11
Calculating the Growth Rate PRACTICE
The growth rate equation: r = (b + i) – (d + e)
In this equation, r = population growth rate, b = birth rate, i = immigration rate, d = death rate, and e = emigration rate.
100 Flies were born, none emigrated but 15 did immigrate into the locker through a vent. 10 Flies died during this time.
Thus r= (100+ 15)-(10 + 0)
r = 105
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Fill in the Blanks
Type answer...
14
Exponential and Logistic Growth
A population may grow very rapidly, or it may grow slowly over time. Population growth may be positive, negative, or show no changes. Population growth depends on environmental conditions. The rate of growth for a population is directly determined by the amount of available resources. These resources include any of an organism’s basic needs such as food, living space, water, and oxygen. If the availability of these resources changes significantly, a change in population growth may result. There are two distinct patterns of population growth: exponential growth and logistic growth.
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Exponential Growth
Almost any species that lives in ideal conditions of available resources, space, and other factors will rapidly increase in population size. This type of growth, called exponential growth, occurs when a population size increases dramatically over a relatively short amount of time.
A graph of exponential growth looks like a J-shaped curve. Exponential growth may occur when a species moves into a previously uninhabited area.
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A real-world example of exponential growth in a population occurred in 1859, when an Australian landowner brought 24 rabbits into the country for sport hunting and released them into the wild. With no predators, enough space, and plentiful resources, the rabbit population grew exponentially and spread across the country. After many unsuccessful tries to control the population, Australian officials estimate today’s population to be between 100 and 200 million rabbits.
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Multiple Choice
What conditions might occur in an ecosystem if a population has exponential growth?
all the other organisms will increase as well
there will be a shortage of resources due to the high population
there will be an increase in resources due to the high population
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20
Multiple Choice
Read the ANALYZE question on the previous slide.
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21
Multiple Select
Which two factors can allow a population to grow in spite of high amounts of death from disease?
immigration
emigration
births
deaths
Engage explore/explain 2- Pop. density and dispersion PART 2

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