A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate...

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A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist observes that the Petri dish is completely full at 10:00 am. Warm-Up

Transcript of A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate...

Page 1: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist observes that the Petri dish is completely full at 10:00 am.

Warm-Up

Page 2: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

1. What do you think will happen after 10 am?

2. In what ways is this example similar to human population growth?

3. In what ways is this example different from human population growth?

Page 3: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

The Human Population

Exponential growth – a quantity increases by a fixed percentage in a given time

The world’s population is increasing at 1.15% every year

Page 4: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

Industrial Revolution

Year

Human Population Growth Over Time

Page 5: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

The Rule of 70

The “Rule of 70” is an easy way to estimate how long it will take a population to double, if you know the growth rate

Page 6: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

The Rule of 70

Ex: If a population’s growth rate is 7% a year, how long will it take to double in size?

70/7% = 10 years

Page 7: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

The Rule of 70

If a country’s population is increasing at about 2% every year, how long will it take to double in size?

70/2% = 35 years

Page 8: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

The Rule of 70

Ex: If a population’s growth rate is 5% a year, how long will it take to double in size?

70/5% = 14 years

Page 9: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

The Rule of 70

The world’s population is increasing at about 1.15% every year, how long will it take to double in size?

70/1.15% = 61 years

Page 10: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.
Page 11: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

Human Population Density

Page 12: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

Human Population Density

Page 13: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.
Page 14: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

Population Map

Page 15: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

Wealth Map

Page 16: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

Think About It

343,000Amount by which the population of all European Union countries combined grew in the year 2000.

343,000Amount by which India's population grew in the first week of 2001.

Page 17: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.
Page 18: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

If the world were a village of 100 people, there would be:

60 Asians 14 Africans 12 Europeans 8 Central/South Americans & Caribbean 5 North Americans 1 Oceania

Page 19: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

If the world were a village of 100 people, there would be:

80 living in substandard housing 50 suffering from malnutrition 33 lacking access to safe drinking water 24 lacking electricity

Page 20: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

WORLD POP.

Developed Countries

Developing Countries

U.S., Canada, Australia, NZ, Japan, Europe

Africa, Asia, Latin American, South

America

• > $10,750 per capita GNI

• 19% of world pop.

• 85% of world’s wealth

• Use 88% of resources

• < $10,750 per capita GNI

• 81% of world pop.

• 15% of world’s wealth

• Use 12% of resources

Page 21: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

What Do You Think?

Are developed countries, like the U.S., obligated to help developing countries develop? Should we be sending our money to other

countries to help provide them with food, clean drinking water, etc.?

Are we obligated to offer financial assistance to developing countries, like Haiti, who have suffered a natural disaster?

Page 22: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

A Changing Population

Based on the differences between developed and developing countries, which do you expect to be increasing in size faster? Developed or developing?

Page 23: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.
Page 24: A scientist places one bacteria in a Petri dish at 9:00 am. The bacteria can reproduce at a rate that doubles its population every minute. The scientist.

Population Questions

Should we be concerned with the increasing world population size?

What should be done to slow the rate of growth?