Populations Chapter 21, lesson 1 LESSON Populations LESSON INTRODUCTION Get Ready What do you think? Before you begin, decide if you agree or disagree with each of.

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Transcript Populations Chapter 21, lesson 1 LESSON Populations LESSON INTRODUCTION Get Ready What do you think? Before you begin, decide if you agree or disagree with each of.

Populations
Chapter 21, lesson 1
LESSON
1
Populations
LESSON INTRODUCTION
Get Ready
What do you think?
Before you begin, decide if you agree or disagree
with each of these statements.
As you view this presentation, see if you change
your mind about any of the statements.
LESSON
1
Populations
LESSON INTRODUCTION
Get Ready
Do you agree or disagree?
•
Some life exists in the ice caps of the North
Pole and the South Pole.
•
A community includes all organisms of one
species that live in the same area.
LESSON
1
Populations
LESSON INTRODUCTION
Key Concepts/Essential Questions
• What defines a population?
• What factors affect the size of a
population?
LESSON
1
Populations
LESSON INTRODUCTION
Vocabulary
Watch out for these words!
• biosphere
• limiting factor
• community
• population density
• population
• biotic potential
• competition
• carrying capacity
Vocabulary
Build a Class Definition
• 1. Write the word competition on chart paper or the board.
• 2. Explain that competition is an inescapable fact of life for
all organisms, including human beings. Plants compete for
water, sunlight, soil nutrients, and space in which to grow.
Animals compete for mates, habitats, and food. People
compete for grades in school, entrance into good colleges,
desirable jobs, boyfriends and girlfriends, and victory in
sporting events.
• 3. While developing a class definition for competition, have
class groups compete to see who can come up with the
best definition.
About the Photo
• If the meerkats sense danger, they make a
warning sound to alert other members of the
group. They can make a variety of warning
sounds, including barks and whistles. Each
sound is specific to a particular predator.
Guiding Questions
• In what other ways might meerkats interact?
– *Meerkats might interact with each other in their group, with other groups of
meerkats, or with other animals who invade their territory.
• What do you think meerkats might do to extend their range of sight when
watching for predators?
– They stand upright or stand on something, such as an anthill or a rock.
• What does meerkat group lifestyle and sentry behavior tell us about the
maintenance of populations?
– They tell us that the survival of a population is often easier if the members of
the population live together and look out for one another.
Teacher Demo
• What is a census?
– Basically, a census is a count of all of the
individuals in a country, an area, a state, or a
county. Explain that, in the United Sates, a census
is taken of the human population once every ten
years (1990, 2000, 2010). Discuss what kinds of
information a census count might provide for a
country or a city. A census might tell a local
government how many people have moved into or
out of an area. Ask how increased population
might affect resources.
Bellringer Transparency
A lone wolf is a good hunter,
but a pack of wolves is fierce.
By cooperating with one
another, pack members can
hunt deer, moose, and other
large prey. Often they kill the
older, weaker members of the
prey population.
Wolves were hunted nearly to
extinction in the United States.
Today, laws protect wolves.
Their populations are rising
in many places.
• 1 What do wolves need to survive?
– 2 How do wolves change the
populations of the animals they hunt?
•
3 Why did people hunt wolves in the
past?
Lesson 1: Populations
• A. The Biosphere and Ecological Systems
• 1. The biosphere is the parts of Earth and the
surrounding atmosphere where there is life.
• 2. The biosphere includes all the land, water,
and ice on Earth.
Lesson 1: Populations
• B. What is a population?
• 1. A(n) species is a group of organisms that
have similar traits and are able to produce
fertile offspring.
• 2. A(n) population is all the organisms of the
same species that live in the same area at the
same time.
Lesson 1: Populations
• 3. A(n) community is all the populations of
different species that live in the same area at
the same time.
• 4. A(n) ecosystem is a group of organisms that
live in an area at one time, as well as the
climate, soil, water, and other nonliving parts
of the environment.
• 5. The study of all ecosystems on Earth is
called ecology.
Lesson 1: Populations
• C. Competition
• 1. Competition is the struggle in a community
for the same resources, such as food, water,
and shelter.
• 2. When few resources are available, there is
more competition to survive in a community.
Lesson 1: Populations
• D. Population Sizes
• 1. Changes in environmental factors, such as
temperature, food availability, water,and
shelter, can change the size of a population.
• 2. A(n) limiting factor is anything that restricts
the size of a population.
• 3. Limiting factors can include water, food,
shelter, sunlight, temperature, disease,
predators, and natural disasters.
Lesson 1: Populations
• 4. One method that is used to count and monitor
animal populations is the capture mark-andrelease method.
• 5. Population density is the size of a population
compared to the amount of space available.
• 6. A population’s biotic potential is the potential
growth of a population if it could grow in perfect
conditions with no limiting factors.
Lesson 1: Populations
• 7. No populations on Earth ever reach their
biotic potential because no ecosystems have
a(n) unlimited supply of natural resources.
Lesson 1: Populations
• 8. The largest number of individuals of one
species that an environment can support is the
carrying capacity.
• a. The carrying capacity of an ecosystem
increases and decreases as the amount of
available resources increases and decreases.
• b. Overpopulation occurs when the size of a
population becomes larger than the carrying
capacity of its ecosystem.
• c. Overpopulation of one species can cause
problems for other organisms in the community.
Discussion Question
• What is the biosphere, and what is included in
it?
• The biosphere is the parts of Earth and the
surrounding atmosphere where there is life.
The
• biosphere includes all the land, water, and ice
on Earth.
The Biosphere and Ecological Systems
Guiding Questions
• Why might the North Pole have very little
green?
– There is no vegetation at the North Pole.
Guiding questions
• What is an ecosystem?
– An ecosystem is all the living and nonliving things
that make up an environment.
• What defines a population?
– A population is all the organisms of the same
species that live in the same area at the same
time.
Using a visual
• How does a population relate to a
community?
– Communities are made up of
populations.
•
How does a community relate to
an ecosystem?
– Ecosystems are made up of
communities.
• How does an ecosystem relate to
a biosphere?
– Biospheres are made up of
ecosystems.
Competition and Population Sizes
• in any community, resources are limited. As a
result, the members of that community must
compete with one another for those
resources. If resources become even more
limited, competition increases.
• population level an environment can support
may vary. As a result, the population may
increase in some periods and decrease in
others as the environment changes.
Guiding questions
• What will happen to a population if food in the
area becomes less plentiful?
– The population will decrease.
• Name two ways that the population in an area
can decrease.
– A population can decrease if not as many members of
the species survive to adulthood. It can also decrease
if part of the population moves to a different area.
Limiting Factors
• the availability of food is just one of the limiting
factors determining population size.
• What is a limiting factor?
– It is anything that restricts the size of a population.
• What factors affect the size of a population?
– Limiting factors include available water, food, shelter,
sunlight, and thermal energy. They also include
natural disasters, disease, and predation.
Measuring Population Size
• Describe two ways you can estimate population size.
– You can estimate an animal population in an area by using the
capture-mark-and- release method. For plants, you can make an
estimate with a sample count. With that method, you count all
the members of a plant species in a representative area, and
then multiply by whatever factor will translate that number to
the larger area in question.
• Why is it difficult to establish the exact number of animals
in an area?
– It is difficult because animals are always moving about. You
might not find all of them or you might count some twice.
biotic potential
• biotic potential describes how limiting factors
affect the biotic potential of a population.
• Why is it almost always impossible for a
population to reach its biotic potential?
– It is almost always impossible for a population to
reach its biotic potential because no ecosystem
has an unlimited supply of natural resources.
Carrying Capacity
• What is carrying capacity?
– Carrying capacity is the greatest number of one
species that an environment can support.
• How can the carrying capacity of an environment
change?
– It can either increase or decrease if available
resources increase or decrease.
Overpopulation
• How can overpopulation affect a community?
– Overpopulation can lead to food shortages and
environmental damage.
• What factors affect
population size in the graph
above?
– disease, space, predators,
food supply
LESSON
1
Populations
LESSON WRAP-UP
Lesson Review
Do you agree or disagree?
Some life exists in the ice caps of the North Pole
and the South Pole.
Agree. The North and South Poles are parts of
Earth’s biosphere.
LESSON
1
Populations
LESSON WRAP-UP
Lesson Review
Do you agree or disagree?
A community includes all organisms of one
species that live in the same area.
Disagree. A community is all the populations of
different species that live together in the same
area at the same time.
LESSON
1
Populations
LESSON WRAP-UP
Key Concept/Essential Question Review
What defines a population?
A population is all the organisms of the same
species that live in the same area at the same
time.
LESSON
1
Populations
LESSON WRAP-UP
Key Concept/Essential Question Review
What factors affect the size of a population?
Population sizes vary due to limiting factors such
as environmental factors and available resources.