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1. What is a Population?
29 March 2005. How
Foxes in the Aleutian Henhouse
Doomed Islands' Plant Life. By
CHARLES PETIT. NY Times. Foxes
may not graze, but a new scientific
study describes how their arrival
on Aleutian islands destroyed rich
grasslands and left only sparse
tundra. The authors of the report,
which appeared in Science last
week, say this transformation
shows how an entire ecosystem may
go into a tailspin if just one
new top carnivore shows up. The
inadvertent experiment began in
the late 1700's and continued
into the early 20th century as
fur traders looking to expand
their supply released nonnative
arctic foxes and, in some cases,
red foxes on more than 400 Alaskan
islands. Some died out, but many
populations survived.... The botanical
impoverishment that has resulted
is the reverse of what usually
happens when a new meat-eater
comes along. "Traditionally,
the predator eats the grazer;
the grazer no longer eats the green
stuff; and the habitat gets more
green," said Dr. Donald
Croll, a professor of biology at
the University of California,
Santa Cruz, and the lead author
of the report. An example of the
more usual routine is in Yellowstone
National Park, where returning
wolves, preying on sapling-browsing
elk and confining the wary survivors
to areas where they can see wolves
coming, have touched off a resurgence
of willow, aspen and other vegetation.
The contrary effect in the Aleutians,
once sorted out, has a simple
explanation. The grazers on these
islands were grass- and seed-eating
Aleutian geese, which are smaller
cousins of Canada geese. The foxes
drove the geese near extinction,
which would have been a boon for
grasses except that the foxes
also feasted on the eggs and hatchlings
of puffins, auklets and other
ocean-feeding seabirds they found
brooding in vast numbers almost
everywhere. Some islands lost
almost all birds except for cliff-nesting
species. And as ground-nesting
birds faded, so did their nutrient-rich
excrement, or guano, which had
been a natural fertilizer. The
research team concluded that islands
with no foxes received an average
361.9 grams per square meter yearly.
Fox-infested islands get just
5.7 grams per square meter of
guano per year....
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Chapters:
- What is a Population?
- Patterns in Populations
- Population Reproduction,
Growth, and Change Over Time
- The History of Human Population
Growth
- The Environmental Impact
of Populations
- One Child
- Can We Limit Human Population
Growth?
- Choosing a World
Addition to Teacher Guide:
The Population
Game From NSTA Science Teacher, April 2004. |
2.
Patterns in Populations
Archive of Past Articles for
Chapter 2
January 2007. Logarithms
and Modelling page has problems in exponential
growth as part of the Exercises in Math Readiness [http://math.usask.ca/mrc-cgi
bin/emr/first_page.cgi]
January 2007. Exponential
growth applet - interactive. See
also "logistic growth" http://www.otherwise.com/population/logistic.html
Archive
of Past Articles for Chapter 2
|
|
Chapters:
- What
is a Population?
- Patterns
in Populations
- Population
Reproduction, Growth, and Change Over Time
- The
History of Human Population Growth
- The
Environmental Impact of Populations
- One
Child
- Can
We Limit Human Population Growth?
- Choosing
a World
|
3. Population
Reproduction, Growth, and Change Over Time
Archive of Past Articles for Chapter 3
8 May 2007. A
Lonesome Tortoise, and a Search for a Mate. By JOHN TIERNEY, NY Times. Excerpt:
When I met Lonesome George two decades ago,
in his pen on the main island of the Gal‡pagos,
I had the usual impulse to fix up the world's
most famous bachelor.... I didn't find her,
of course, so I went back to George's pen
to bid a sad farewell to him and his species.
Then I penned a long - and quite moving, I
thought - contemplation of the ethics of conservation,
the destructiveness of man and the meaning
of life. Now it seems the obituary was premature.
... Last week, after sampling the genes of
a few tortoises on Isabela Island, biologists
announced that there is probably at least
one Pinta tortoise somewhere among the thousands
of tortoises there. Next year the researchers
hope to find a female to take back to George's
pen.
...George is not what you would call a stud.
When I visited him in 1985, he was thought
to be a relatively young adult, maybe 50 years
old, but he was already a confirmed bachelor.
He hadn't shown any interest in two females
of a similar species placed in his pen. One
had flipped over and drowned in the wading
pool. The keepers weren't positive that George
had driven this tortoise to her death, but
he definitely hadn't been doing any Barry
White serenades.
A few years later, in 1993, there was briefly
a companion known as "Lonesome George's
girlfriend," but she was not a tortoise.
She was a 26-year-old graduate student in
zoology from Switzerland named Sveva Grigioni.
By coating her hands in the genital secretions
of female tortoises and gently stroking him,
she managed to demonstrate a couple of times
(in the course of several months' work) that
George was capable of an erection. But whereas
her touch could induce other male tortoises
to reach orgasm within a few minutes, with
George she never managed to collect any sperm.
..."He started to try copulation," Ms.
Grigioni said, "but it was like he didn't
really know how to." To be fair to George,
he's never been observed with a female of
his race, Geochelone nigra abingdoni....The
tortoise populations in the Gal‡pagos
were devastated first by hungry whalers and
pirates, and then by museum collectors who
were far more energetic than the sailors in
scouring the islands for the few remaining
animals. Until George was discovered, the
last tortoises seen alive on Pinta were the
ones captured and killed a century ago by
an expedition from the California Academy
of Science....
Archive
of Past Articles for Chapter 3
|
|
Chapters:
- What
is a Population?
- Patterns
in Populations
- Population
Reproduction, Growth, and Change Over Time
- The
History of Human Population Growth
- The
Environmental Impact of Populations
- One
Child
- Can
We Limit Human Population Growth?
- Choosing
a World
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4.
The History of Human Population Growth
September 2004. India's Population to Surpass
China's By 2035. The
2004 World Population Data Sheet, released
this month by the Population
Reference Bureau, http://www.prb.org/,
projects an overall global population increase
of 45% to 9.3 billion people by the year 2050.
The United States is expected to remain the
third most populous country through that year,
falling behind India, which will become the
most populous country, and China, which will
drop to number two. PRB predicts that most
of the population growth will occur in the
developing countries, despite higher HIV/AIDS
infection rates and higher infant mortality
rates than in the developed world. The figures
assume that HIV/AIDS prevalence in Africa
will peak in 10-15 years and then rates will
drop on the continent, where they are already
decreasing in 14 of 38 countries. The gap
between the developed and developing countries'
figures is also attributed to aging populations,
along with more frequent contraceptive use
and lower birth rates in several European
countries.
Population Density Maps -- http://sedac.ciesin.columbia.edu/plue/gpw
|
|
Chapters:
- What
is a Population?
- Patterns
in Populations
- Population
Reproduction, Growth, and Change Over Time
- The
History of Human Population Growth
- The
Environmental Impact of Populations
- One
Child
- Can
We Limit Human Population Growth?
- Choosing
a World
|
5.
The Environmental Impact of Populations
Archive of Past Articles for Chapter
5
10 April 2007. Millions
Face Hunger From Climate Change.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Excerpt:
MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Rising global
temperatures could melt Latin
America's glaciers within 15
years, cause food shortages affecting
130 million people across Asia
by 2050 and wipe out Africa's
wheat crop, according to a U.N.
report released Tuesday. The report,
written and reviewed by hundreds
of scientists, outlined dramatic
effects of climate change including
rising sea levels, the disappearance
of species and intensifying natural
disasters. It said 30 percent
of the world's coastlines could
be lost by 2080. ...Polar ice caps
will likely melt, opening a waterway
at the North Pole and threatening
to make the Panama Canal obsolete,
IPCC member Edmundo de Alba said.
Warmer waters will spawn bigger
and more dangerous hurricanes that
will threaten coastlines not traditionally
affected by them. Latin America's
diverse ecosystems will struggle
with intense droughts and flooding
and as many as 70 million people
in the region will be left without
enough water, according to the
report. ''What's clear is places
suffering from drought are going
to become drier, and places with
a large amount of precipitation
are going to see an increase in
precipitation,'' de Alba said.
Many Latin American farmers will
have to abandon traditional crops
such as corn, rice, wheat and sugar
as their soil becomes increasingly
saline, and ranchers will have
to find new ways to feed their
livestock, scientists said. ...In
Asia, nearly 100 million people
will face the risk of floods from
seas that are expected to rise
between 0.04 inches to 0.12 inches
annually, slightly higher than
the global average. The report
suggests that a 3.6-degree increase
in mean air temperature could decrease
rain-fed rice yields by 5 percent
to 12 percent in China. In Bangladesh,
rice production may fall by just
under 10 percent and wheat by a
third by the year 2050. The drops
in yields combined with rising
populations could put close to
50 million extra people at risk
of hunger by 2020, 132 million
by 2050 and 266 million by 2080,
the report said. ...On the Net:
http://www.ipcc.ch/
7 February 2007. China
Says Rich Countries Should Take
Lead on Global Warming. By
JIM YARDLEY, NY Times. Excerpt:
BEIJING, Feb. 6 - China said
Tuesday that wealthier countries
must take the lead in curbing
greenhouse gas emissions and
refused to say whether it would
agree to any mandatory emissions
limits that might hamper its
booming economy. Jiang Yu, a
spokeswoman for the Foreign Ministry,
said ... "It must be pointed
out that climate change has been
caused by the long-term historic
emissions of developed countries
and their high per capita emissions," she
said, adding that developed countries
have responsibilities for global
warming "that cannot be
shirked." ...China is the
world's second largest emitter
of the greenhouse gases contributing
to climate change, .... Last
November, the International Energy
Agency in Paris predicted that
China would pass the United States
in emissions of carbon dioxide
in 2009. ...Qin Dahe, chief of
the China Meteorological Administration,
told reporters ... "President
Hu Jintao has said that climate
change is not just an environmental
issue but also ... ultimately
a development issue." ..."As
a developing country that's growing
rapidly and has a big population,
to thoroughly transform the energy
structure and use clean energy
would need a lot of money," Mr.
Qin said, according to Reuters...
The
Gazette
http://www.populationconnection.org/education/gazette/
Population Activities http://www.populationconnection.org
Population Reference Bureau http://www.prb.org/
United Nations Population fund http://www.unfpa.org/
Archive
of Past Articles for Chapter 5
|
|
Chapters:
- What
is a Population?
- Patterns
in Populations
- Population
Reproduction, Growth, and Change Over
Time
- The
History of Human Population Growth
- The
Environmental Impact of Populations
- One
Child
- Can
We Limit Human Population Growth?
- Choosing
a World
|
6. One Child
Archive of Past Articles for Chapter
6
6 April 2007. To
Fortify China, Soybean Harvest
Grows in Brazil.
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO, NY Times.
Excerpt:
RONDONîPOLIS, Brazil
- For more than 2,000 years, the
Chinese have turned soybeans into
tofu, a staple of the country's
diet. But as its economy grows,
so does China's appetite for pork,
poultry and beef, which require
higher volumes of soybeans as animal
feed. Plagued by scarce water supplies,
China is turning to a new trading
partner 15,000 miles away - Brazil
- to supply more protein-packed
beans essential to a richer diet.
China's global scramble for natural
resources is leading to a transformation
of agricultural trading around
the world. In China, vanishing
cropland and diminishing water
supplies are hampering the country's
ability to feed itself, and the
increasing use of farmland in the
United States to produce biofuels
is pushing China to seek more of
its staples from South America,
where land is still cheap and plentiful.
...The Chinese want to connect
directly with Brazilian farmers,
bypassing the multinational grain
merchants. While they have yet
to make a major purchase of cropland
in Brazil, they are looking to
invest in improved facilities and
upgrade the antiquated rail system.
China began looking overseas for
more soybean supplies in the mid-1990s,
when the scope of its land and
water problems became clearer.
Beijing has also chosen to use
more of its arable farmland to
grow fruits and vegetables, crops
that make better use of China's
cheap labor and scarcer water supplies
to generate higher returns on the
export market....
Archive
of Past Articles for Chapter
6
|
  |
Chapters:
- What
is a Population?
- Patterns
in Populations
- Population
Reproduction, Growth, and Change Over Time
- The
History of Human Population Growth
- The
Environmental Impact of Populations
- One
Child
- Can
We Limit Human Population Growth?
- Choosing
a World
|
7.
Can We Limit Human Population Growth?
Archive of Past Articles for Chapter
7
11 May 2006. Scientists
Will Gather to Discuss Safety
of Abortion Pill.
By GARDINER HARRIS NY Times. Worried
about a bacterial infection that
led to the deaths of at least five
women who took the abortion pill
RU-486, scientists from the nation's
leading public health agencies
will gather in Atlanta today for
the first meeting in 10 years
on the drug's safety. ...Abortion
experts have been at a loss to
explain why four of the deaths
occurred in California. Initially,
the F.D.A. investigated whether
the pills used in California might
have been contaminated, but an
agency official said tests had
found no evidence of contamination.
Another theory concerned the role
a dry climate might play in encouraging
the growth of Clostridium sordellii,
which lives in soil. Some experts
believe that pregnant women who
take RU-486 with another drug,
misoprostol, are more vulnerable
to infection. RU-486 by itself
ends early pregnancies, but the
pill is routinely given along
with misoprostol, which causes
uterine contractions ...There
has been no hint that the F.D.A.
is considering further restrictions
on the use of the drug. ...A 43-year-old
New York mother of two who said
that she had had "every kind
of abortion," told her abortion
provider during a counseling
session recently that she would
consider only a pill-based procedure. "I
do not like doctors and hospitals," said
the woman, who did not wish her
name to be used for privacy reasons.
"Both of my children were
born at home without anything.
And that's how I want to have my
abortion: in home, in my privacy,
at my own pace and without somebody's
other agenda over me." ...Anne
Hawkins, 36, also of New York,
said she, too, had had both pill-based
and surgical abortions. But taking
RU-486, she said, "was the
worst experience, the most physically
and emotionally painful thing,
that I've ever been through." Ms.
Hawkins had another abortion in
March, and she chose surgery. "It
was 10 minutes, max, and then
it was over,"
Ms. Hawkins said of the surgical
procedure. "The
pill for me was the experience
of having a baby. Contractions
for 10 hours, sweating, screaming,
being by myself. It was emotionally
scarring and physically horrible."
Archive
of Past Articles for Chapter
7
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  |
Chapters:
- What
is a Population?
- Patterns
in Populations
- Population
Reproduction, Growth, and Change Over Time
- The
History of Human Population Growth
- The
Environmental Impact of Populations
- One
Child
- Can
We Limit Human Population Growth?
- Choosing
a World
|
| 8.
Choosing a World
The
Gazette
http://www.populationconnection.org/education/gazette/
Population
Activities http://www.populationconnection.org
Population
Reference Bureau http://www.prb.org/
United
Nations Population fund http://www.unfpa.org/ |
|
Chapters:
- What
is a Population?
- Patterns
in Populations
- Population
Reproduction, Growth, and Change
Over Time
- The
History of Human Population Growth
- The
Environmental Impact of Populations
- One
Child
- Can
We Limit Human Population Growth?
- Choosing
a World
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