Population Growth and Limitations
Ever wonder why animal populations don't just grow forever? Population growth follows mathematical patterns that ecologists can calculate using a simple formula birthrate+immigration - deathrate+emigration. When this number is positive, the population grows; when negative, it shrinks.
In ideal conditions with unlimited resources, populations grow exponentially—increasing by a fixed percentage each year, creating a J-shaped curve when graphed. But this never continues indefinitely in nature! Eventually, limiting factors in the environment slow growth down.
These limiting factors come in two types. Density-dependent factors change in influence as the population gets more crowded—like food competition, predation, and disease that become bigger problems in dense populations. Density-independent factors affect populations regardless of their size—think natural disasters, extreme weather, or habitat destruction.
Study tip When thinking about limiting factors, imagine a crowded elevator. As more people enter (increasing density), problems like lack of space and oxygen become worse density−dependent, but a power outage would affect everyone equally regardless of crowding density−independent.
Each species has a biotic potential—their maximum theoretical ability to reproduce under perfect conditions. The gap between this potential and actual population growth shows how strongly limiting factors are affecting a species in its environment.