High birth rates can lead to overpopulation, putting pressure on resources and causing competition for food and habitat. Conversely, high death rates can impact population dynamics, potentially causing decline in certain species and disrupting the balance of the ecosystem. Both factors can have cascading effects on food chains and biodiversity within the ecosystem.
The proper sequence in the demographic transition model is: Stage 1 - high birth and death rates, Stage 2 - high birth rates and declining death rates, Stage 3 - declining birth rates and low death rates, Stage 4 - low birth and death rates, and some scholars also recognize a Stage 5 with very low birth and death rates.
Stage 1: High birth and death rates, leading to a stable population. Stage 2: High birth rates and decreasing death rates, resulting in rapid population growth. Stage 3: Declining birth and death rates, leading to a slowing population growth. Stage 4: Low birth and death rates, resulting in a stable or declining population.
Yes, in the first stage of the demographic transition, both birth rates and death rates are high, resulting in a stable population size. This is typically seen in pre-industrial societies where high birth rates compensate for high death rates, leading to minimal population growth.
One factor that does not directly affect population growth is the color of the sky. Population growth is typically influenced by factors such as birth rates, death rates, immigration, and emigration.
The United States and the United Kingdom are both in stages of demographic transition. For both countries, an influx of immigrants have changed the culture.
If birth rates exceed death rates, the population increases proportionally. If death rates exceed birth rates, the population decreases.
Birth rates rise as death rates fall?
Canada's birth/death rates per 1000 are: birth: 10.12 death: 10.8
Some of the factors include: -Population Momentum -Affluence -Technology -Whether or not a country is Developing/Developed -Disease -Immigration and Emigration -Respect for Women ( countries that treat women as second-class citizens often have higher fertility rates) -Epideimiologic Transition -Birth Rate -Death Rate
What affects death rates???Quite a few things can affect death rates a few of them are:warfaminedroughtdiseaseThese are just a few of the things which affect death rates
Demographic transition
availability of food, climatic conditions, Wealth. Birth rates are affected by infant mortalities Governments population policies Availability for family planning safety of child birth Death rates are affected by... food supply medication availabilities and hospitals disease and cleaniness
The tendency of a population to shift from high birth and death rates is called a demographic transition.
availability of food, climatic conditions, Wealth. Birth rates are affected by infant mortalities Governments population policies Availability for family planning safety of child birth Death rates are affected by... food supply medication availabilities and hospitals disease and cleaniness
The proper sequence in the demographic transition model is: Stage 1 - high birth and death rates, Stage 2 - high birth rates and declining death rates, Stage 3 - declining birth rates and low death rates, Stage 4 - low birth and death rates, and some scholars also recognize a Stage 5 with very low birth and death rates.
Demographic transition
birth:10.08 death rate:10.34