Populations (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Biology)
Revision Note
Written by: Lára Marie McIvor
Reviewed by: Lucy Kirkham
Definition of Population
A population is defined as a group of organisms of one species, living in the same area at the same time
Other important definitions
A community is defined as all of the populations of different species in an ecosystem
An ecosystem is defined as a unit containing the community of organisms and their environment, interacting together (eg a decomposing log, a lake)
Population Growth
All living organisms compete with each other for food, water and living space
Those which are the best adapted to their environments generally increase their populations at the expense of those less well adapted
Population growth in most organisms is controlled by the following three factors:
Food supply
Predation
Disease
The Population Growth Curve: Extended
If the growth of microorganisms in a fermenter is measured over time, the population growth looks like the graph below
A typical growth curve for a population in an enclosed environment
The shape of this curve ( a little like an ‘S’), gives it its name - a sigmoid growth curve
The curve has four distinct phases:
Lag phase - organisms are adapting to the environment before they are able to reproduce; in addition, at this stage there are very few organisms and so reproduction is not producing larger numbers of offspring
Log phase (aka exponential phase) - food supply is abundant, birth rate is rapid and death rate is low; growth is exponential and only limited by the number of new individuals that can be produced
Stationary phase - population levels out due to a factor in the environment, such as a nutrient, becoming limited as it is not being replenished; birth rate and death rate are equal and will remain so until either the nutrient is replenished or becomes severely limited
Death phase - population decreases as death rate is now greater than birth rate; this is usually because food supply is short or metabolic wastes produced by the population have built up to toxic levels
Organisms in a natural environment are unlikely to show population growth like a sigmoid growth curve because they are affected by many other factors, including:
changing temperature or light
predators
disease
immigration (individuals moving into the area)
emigration (individuals moving out of the area)
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