More people ---> more resources we need like gas, trees, electricity...
Very true. Man consumes wild amounts of energy. We also are becoming a very dirty group of people. Soda cans, toxic waste from people dumping items in the drain or their backyards are major sources of pollution.
How many people in the world, at this very moment believe that man is causing global warming, yet own and operate an air conditioner?
The hypocrisy issues we have built is amazing. Claiming to be interested in the environment is now as good as actually doing something about it. We can sit in our heated/ air conditioned home with a soda from a throwaway can, in our hand and read the internet while listening to T.V. and wishing man didn't consume so much. Sadly, that is now normal. We use more energy today then ever before. Most homes did not have air conditioning in 1970. Most poor people today even use it.
We are destroying the environment by waste. We hide this issue by claiming false problems (like Global Warming) are a crisis and ignore the fact we are the problem.
due to pollution and over population
The two types of population regulation are density-dependent factors, which are influenced by population size, and density-independent factors, which affect populations regardless of size. Density-dependent factors include competition for resources, predation, and disease. Density-independent factors include natural disasters, climate events, and human activities.
Density-dependent limiting factors include competition for resources, predation, and disease, which become more intense as the population density increases. Density-independent limiting factors, such as natural disasters and climate events, affect populations regardless of their density.
the population explosion affected the west natural rescorces because idk.will someone please answer it
competition for resources, predation, disease, and parasitism. These factors tend to have a stronger effect on population growth as population density increases.
If there are 220 people in a place which has resources only for 200 people then those 20 will suffer as there are no resources for them. Hence they will try to do something about it and it will put a pressure on the place. The resources will be fought for.
The Quantum Legacy is when pudding is thrown at a monkey
The two types of limiting factors are density-dependent factors, which increase in intensity as population density increases, and density-independent factors, which affect populations regardless of their density. Examples of density-dependent factors include competition for resources and disease, while examples of density-independent factors include natural disasters and climate change.
Natural disasters, such as hurricanes or fires, are considered density-independent limiting factors because their impact on a population does not depend on the population's size or density. Instead, these factors affect a population regardless of its size.
Population density effects population size through many different factors: predation, spread of disease, competition for resources, and parasites. As such, it has a powerful effect on the carrying capacity of an environment.
A natural disaster is considered a density-independent limiting factor because its impact on a population does not depend on the population's size or density. Events such as hurricanes, earthquakes, and wildfires can affect large areas and populations regardless of how many individuals are present. This means that even in low-density populations, a natural disaster can cause significant mortality and disruption, leading to a decline in population numbers without being influenced by the population's density.
Environmental factors that limit population density include availability of food, water, shelter, and suitable habitat, as well as competition for resources, predation, disease, and environmental disturbances such as natural disasters. These factors can affect the ability of individuals within a population to survive and reproduce, ultimately influencing the overall population size.