because it has limited space and resources
we have more individuals than natures balance allows, human population doesn't follow the usual ecological patterns seen in other mammals
it is unevenly distributed worldwide
because death rates declined rapidly due to medical and technological advances, while birth rates remained high. this causes an imbalance where more people are being born than dying (exponential growth)
Example: COVID-19 increased global death rates. population growth is not guaranteed
a model that explains how population size and growth rate change as a country develops economically and socially. describes the change in birth/death rates in 4 stages
Pre-industrial, transitional, industrial and post-industrial
Birth rates: Very high
Death rates: Very high
Population growth: Very slow or stable.
Example: Pre-1800s societies before the Industrial Revolution.
Death rates drop rapidly due to improvements in food supply, sanitation, and medicine (Industrial Revolution effects).
Birth rates remain high, so population grows explosively.
Birth rates start to decline as societies become more urbanized and economically developed.
Reasons for decline:
Increased education (especially for women).
Access to contraception and family planning.
Shift from agricultural to industrial economy — children become an economic cost instead of an asset.
Improved child survival = fewer births needed to maintain family size.
Death rates remain low → population growth slows down.
Both birth and death rates are low → population stabilizes or even declines.Families choose to have fewer or no children due to career priorities and higher living costs.
1. improved hygiene and sanitation (less disease transmission) 2. Better nutrition/agriculture (more stable food supply) 3. Access to modern medication (vaccines, antibiotics) 4. Civil infrastructure imporvements
1. economic development (higher living costs and urbanization make larger families impractical) 2. Education (educated women tend to have fewer children). 3. employment (more women in the workforce reduce family size) 4. access to contraception 5. social/cultrual shifts (children are seen as dependants and not as economic labor)
the total value of goods and services a country produces divided by its population.
→ It measures economic prosperity per person.
Wealthier nations tend to have lower fertility rates because:
Education and career priorities increase.
Access to contraception and healthcare improves.
Living costs and housing prices rise, making large families expensive
birth rates
Human impact on the environment can be summarized by the IPAT equation:
I = P × A × T
I: Environmental impact
P: Population size
A: Affluence (consumption per person)
T: Technology (resources & energy used to produce goods or manage waste)
impact (I) usually increases.
worsen (more pollution, resource use) or improve (clean energy, recycling) environmental impact.
#1 Demand-induced scarcity: Caused by population growth = higher demand for food, water, and energy. #2 Supply-induced scarcity: from degradation of resources (pollution, soil erosion, climate change). #3 Structural scarcity: resources are unequally distributed among people (rich vs. poor). Leads to inequality and conflict
hyper-exponential (faster than exponential because of technology and consumption).
global ecological pressure.
area of productive land required to supply resources (food, water, energy, materials) and absorb waste (e.g., CO₂ emissions).
hectares per person.
Includes land used for:
Food production
Transportation and manufacturing
Energy generation
Waste absorption
exceeds Earth's biocapacity
rich countries drive the overshoot through overconsumption
83% of wilderness is modified by humans.
98% of potential farmland is already in use.
Little space remains to expand without destroying ecosystems
have declined drastically since 1970.
Land & Wilderness Loss, Wildlife Decline, Exceeding Carrying Capacity → Extinction(decline in freshwater species populations -80%)., Terrestrial Species Decline (Land species also declining globally)
Industrialization, machinery, hydrocarbon burning, and aerosol emissions have greatly increased greenhouse gas concentrations.
Habitat loss and population instability as species can’t adapt fast enough to temperature shifts.
Forests are vulnerable ecosystems, deforestation releases stored carbon and reduces CO₂ absorption.
Less snow and smaller ice cover = lower albedo (reflectivity) → more heat absorbed → positive feedback that accelerates warming.
temperatures have skyrocketed due to human greenhouse gas emissions.
Arctic sea ice has been declining in thickness and volume and is being replaced with thin seasonal ice that melts each summer. This causes a reduction in the Earth's albedo (reflectivity), which causes more solar energy to be absorbed by the ocean. This warms up the planet, causing a feedback loop. Melting permafrost also releases methane; these effects cause global climate change by increasing warming and changing weather patterns.
human activities (burning fossil fuels, industrialization, deforestation) and is happening at a faster rate due to feedback loops like ice melting and methane release and land use change
1.“It’s not real.”
2.“It’s real but not caused by people.”
3.“It’s real and human-caused, but it’ll be fine or even good.”
4.“It’s a global conspiracy.”
It’s causing range shifts, changes in timing (phenology), and new ecological interactions, which causes ecosystems to reorganization.
When species move into new areas, usually northward or poleward, due to reduced climate barriers and warmer conditions.
When species lose habitat at the southern or lower-altitude edges of their ranges due to rising temperatures.
the changes in the timing of biological events like migration, reproduction, and flowering due to climate change.
they’re happening earlier in the year
They may face extinction or competition from new species that invade their habitats.
It causes ecosystem reorganization
Isotherms are lines of equal temperature; as the planet warms, they move northward, forcing species to follow their preferred temperature zones.
they can’t move higher or farther north, so their entire habitats disapear (e.g., alpine and polar ecosystems).
Because the speed and scale of range shifts, extinctions, and ecological disruptions have no precedent in human history.
sea levels rise, uninhabitable regions, methane & carbon sink, biodiversity loss, food insecurity, loss of ecosystem services, extreme weather casualties, governance failure and conflict of resources
sea level control, population stabilization, education & equity,, sustainable prosperity and land use integration
Growth in protected areas and conservation zones worldwide.
Some endangered species recovering; wildlife stabilization in a few regions.
Carbon emissions may be stabilizing; renewable energy use is increasing fast.
Population growth slowing globally, especially in developed regions.
Humanity has shown it can respond effectively to global threats (e.g., ozone treaties).
Rising awareness of harmful land use (like pesticides) → stronger global efforts to reduce environmental risks.
