Elijah Grant
September 30, 2023
EVR1001- Environmental Science
Unit 3 Notes
Chapter 6- Populations
Population Ecology
Population size, the number of
organisms in an area at a given time,
will grow when resources are
abundant and natural enemies are few.
oDeclines due to resource loss,
natural disaster, or impacts from
another species.
, oThe North American passenger
pigeon and went extinct due to
overhunting.
Carrying Capacity
Carrying capacity (K)- the maximum
population size of a species that its
environment can sustain.
oAn S-shaped logistic growth curve
Limiting factors slow and stop
exponential growth.
oCarrying capacity changes.
Limiting factors restrain growth
Eventually, every population is
constrained by physical, chemical,
and biological limiting factors in the
environment.
, oThese factors determine carrying
capacity, the maximum population
size of a species that an
environment can sustain.
Population growth slows as it reaches
the carrying capacity. This produces
an S-shaped curve called
logistic growth.
When a population exceeds its habitat’s
carrying capacity, its population can
crash
Carrying capacity: not fixed
Reproductive time lag may lead to
overshooting.
Dieback (crash)
Damage may reduce area’s carrying
capacity.
September 30, 2023
EVR1001- Environmental Science
Unit 3 Notes
Chapter 6- Populations
Population Ecology
Population size, the number of
organisms in an area at a given time,
will grow when resources are
abundant and natural enemies are few.
oDeclines due to resource loss,
natural disaster, or impacts from
another species.
, oThe North American passenger
pigeon and went extinct due to
overhunting.
Carrying Capacity
Carrying capacity (K)- the maximum
population size of a species that its
environment can sustain.
oAn S-shaped logistic growth curve
Limiting factors slow and stop
exponential growth.
oCarrying capacity changes.
Limiting factors restrain growth
Eventually, every population is
constrained by physical, chemical,
and biological limiting factors in the
environment.
, oThese factors determine carrying
capacity, the maximum population
size of a species that an
environment can sustain.
Population growth slows as it reaches
the carrying capacity. This produces
an S-shaped curve called
logistic growth.
When a population exceeds its habitat’s
carrying capacity, its population can
crash
Carrying capacity: not fixed
Reproductive time lag may lead to
overshooting.
Dieback (crash)
Damage may reduce area’s carrying
capacity.