not really because at the same time as people ar being born new medical advances can make more people live longer but in the end it usually would catch up with itself and stay prity close.......false is my answer......:)
Birth Rate: 19.77 births/1,000 population (2008 est.)Death Rate: 6.16 deaths/1,000 population (2008 est.)
Population is affected by birth rate, death rate and migration.
The rate of natural increase in a population is determined by subtracting the death rate from the birth rate. This calculation gives the overall growth rate of a population without considering factors like immigration or emigration.
There are more people who are born then die.
birth rate is 10 people per second
zero population growth
If birth rates exceed death rates, the population increases proportionally. If death rates exceed birth rates, the population decreases.
If the birth rate is higher than the death rate, the population increases. If the death rate is higher than the birth rate, the population decreases.
A population with a death rate greater than a birth rate has a declining population.
the birth rate is the rate of birth in a population, the death rate is the number of deaths in a population and the growth rate is the growing numbers of the population.
No, steady state in a bacterial population means that the birth rate equals the death rate, resulting in a stable population size. Bacteria are still dying in a steady state, but the rate of death is balanced by the rate of reproduction.
previous population+birth-death
The overall growth rate of the general population is stagnant .
It can tell you if the population has increased by the Birth Rate, or has decreased by the Death Rate.
Demographic transition
because every 3 seconds someone is born. every 5 seconds someone dies
because birth rates and death rates relate to population. the birth rate shows how much a population is increasing, and death rates show how much a population is decreasing. when you average the two out, it will give you the population(: