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5.2 Limits to growth Limiting factors cause the growth of a population to decrease. A limiting factor can be many things, limited water supply, limited food supply, limited space, limited nutrients (such as nitrogen or phosphorus. For example, panda bears eat bamboo that grows in the temperate forests of china. Because humans need space, forests are cleared which depletes the bamboo trees. Therefore, bamboo has become a limiting factor- and panda bear populations have declined to near extinction There are 2 main types of Limiting Factors 1. Density-dependent factors 2. Density-independent factors Density-dependent factors Density-dependent factors depend on the size of a population in a given area. In other words, if the population is high (dense), density dependent factors will appear Examples of density dependent factors 1. Competition 2. Predation 3. Parasitism 4. Disease These factors are not a big deal unless the population is dense (or large) competition When a population is dense, individuals will compete for the same resources. Whenever there is competition, there must be a winner and a loser – something must die. In other words, individuals of the same species are trying to occupy the same niche. Predation Predation is the relationship where one organism (the predator) hunts, kills, and eats another (prey) This is called the predator-prey relationship. The success of one will affect the success of the other. • Parasitism and disease Parasites (usually cause a disease) are similar to predators. They take nourishment from the host, at the expense of the host. This weakens the host and sometimes causes death. • Density-independent factors Density-independent factors affect all populations in similar ways regardless of the population size. Examples are unusual weather, natural disasters, seasonal cycles, human activities such as damming rivers and cutting forests. More specific examples include Hurricanes, floods, droughts, long winters, long summers, humans with insecticides Such events can cause population sizes to collapse. In many cases, living things adapt to change. But is the change is too great or too sudden, extinction follows as a population dwindles to zero. • • •