DOC PREVIEW
Berkeley BIOLOGY 1B - Lecture Notes

This preview shows page 1 out of 4 pages.

Save
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 4 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience

Unformatted text preview:

Biology 1B Ecology Lecture 2 Page 1 Assigned readings 8th Edition pp 1148 1155 1181 1195 7th Edition pp 1080 1083 1143 1146 1152 1156 Population Growth Outline of Lecture 2 A Ecology B Exponential Growth C Density dependent and independent effects D Human Population growth E Impact of human population on environment A Ecology 1 Why does a particular kind of plant or animal live in one place and not another 2 The examination of the physical and biological variables that govern the distribution of plants and animals 3 Study of the factors that control the numbers of different kinds of plants and animals 4 Set of principles by which we attempt to predict behavior of assemblages of organisms 5 The study of the relationships of organisms with one another and with their environment 6 How does this differ from the popular view of ecology Professor Resh Spring 2010 Biology 1B Ecology Lecture 2 Page 2 Assigned readings 8th Edition pp 1148 1155 1181 1195 7th Edition pp 1080 1083 1143 1146 1152 1156 Population Growth B Exponential Growth see Fig 53 11 on p 1183 in text 8th Edit see Fig 52 10 on p 1144 in text 7th Edit 1 The intrinsic rate of natural increase of a population r the biotic potential of a population 2 If dN dt is the rate of change in numbers over time its innate capacity for growth ri can be used to determine population growth as dN dt riN 3 r difference between birth rate and death rate per given number of individuals per unit time 4 A population ultimately stabilizes at the carrying capacity K with dN dt rN K N K 5 Carrying capacity can be considered as the number of different individual organisms that the resources of a given area can support Professor Resh Spring 2010 Biology 1B Ecology Lecture 2 Page 3 Assigned readings 8th Edition pp 1148 1155 1181 1195 7th Edition pp 1080 1083 1143 1146 1152 1156 Population Growth 6 S shaped sigmoid curve logistic population growth model C Density dependent effects factors that increase as a function of population size increases Density independent effects factors that operate regardless of population size Long term cycles often involve both effects What are examples of each of these effects D Human population growth Professor Resh Spring 2010 Biology 1B Ecology Lecture 2 Page 4 Assigned readings 8th Edition pp 1148 1155 1181 1195 7th Edition pp 1080 1083 1143 1146 1152 1156 Population Growth E Three views of human population growth 1 Neo Malthusian position Impact of human population of people X their affluence X environmental effects of technology used to achieve affluence What is the difference in Impact of an individual living in a developed compared to an undeveloped country 2 Marxist position When humans lack the basic means of subsistence and when there is massive and permanent unemployment then poverty breeds overpopulation because larger populations are necessary to survive 3 Neo conservative Humans have omnipotent powers to extend resources new technology more than compensates for problems of having additional humans Neo Malthusians increased human population causes a threat to the environment We should accept neo conservative position that more food must be grown and science must produce solutions should accept Marxist position that governments must respond wisely to population growth should accept neomalthusian position because of impact components Professor Resh Spring 2010


View Full Document

Berkeley BIOLOGY 1B - Lecture Notes

Documents in this Course
Notes 1

Notes 1

4 pages

EVOLUTION

EVOLUTION

12 pages

Evolution

Evolution

12 pages

Load more
Download Lecture Notes
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view Lecture Notes and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view Lecture Notes and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?