5.1 How Populations Grow
5.1 How Populations Grow
5.1 How Populations Grow
Key Questions:
1) How do ecologists study populations?
2) What factors affect population growth?
3) What happens during exponential growth? Logistic
growth?
THINK ABOUT IT
– In the 1950s, a fish farmer in
Florida tossed a few plants
called hydrilla into a canal.
Hydrilla was imported from Asia
for use in home aquariums
because it is hardy and
adaptable. The few plants he
tossed in reproduced quickly
and kept on reproducing.
– Today, their tangled stems snag
boats in rivers and overtake
habitats; native water plants and
animals are disappearing. Why
did these plants get so out of
control? Is there any way to get
rid of them?
Describing Populations
– The story of hydrilla involves dramatic
changes in the sizes of populations.
– Ex: ducks in a pond may have a low density, while fish and
other animals in the same pond community may have
higher densities.
Clumped-most common
random
– A population may
decrease in size if
individuals move out of
the population’s range, a
process called
emigration.
Exponential Growth
– If you provide a population with all the food and space it
needs, protect it from predators and disease, and remove its
waste products, the population will grow.
– If nothing were to stop this kind of growth, the population would become
larger and larger, faster and faster, until it approached an infinitely large
size.
Organisms That Reproduce
Slowly
– Many organisms grow and reproduce much more
slowly than bacteria.