In biology, a population is the collection of inter-breeding organisms of a particular species; in sociology, a collection of human beings. Individuals within a population share a factor may be reduced by statistical means, but such a generalization may be too vague to imply anything. Demography is used extensively in marketing, which relates to economic units, such as retailers, to potential customers. For example, a coffee shop that wants to sell to a younger audience looks at the demographics of an area to be able to appeal to this younger audience.

World population

Main article: World population

According to papers published by the United States Census Bureau, the world population hit 6.5 billion (6,500,000,000) on February 24, 2006. The United Nations Population Fund designated October 12, 1999 as the approximate day on which world population reached 6 billion. This was about 12 years after world population reached 5 billion in 1987, and 6 years after world population reached 5.5 billion in 1993. However, the population of some countries, such as Nigeria and China is not even known to the nearest million, so there is a considerable margin of error in such estimates. Population growth increased significantly as the Industrial Revolution gathered pace from 1700 onwards. The last 50 years have seen a yet more rapid increase in the rate of population growth due to medical advances and substantial increases in agricultural productivity, particularly in the period 1960 to 1995 made by the Green Revolution. In 2007 the United Nations Population Division projected that the world's population will likely surpass 10 billion in 2055. In the future, world population has been expected to reach a peak of growth, from there it will decline due to economic reasons, health concerns, land exhaustion and environmental hazards. There is around an 85% chance that the world's population will stop growing before the end of the century. There is a 60% probability that the world's population will not exceed 10 billion people before 2100, and around a 15% probability that the world's population at the end of the century will be lower than it is today. For different regions, the date and size of the peak population will vary considerably.

Population control

Main article: Population control

Population control is the practice of curtailing population increase, usually by reducing the birth rate. Surviving records from Ancient Greece document the first known examples of population control. These include the colonization movement, which saw Greek outposts being built across the Mediterranean and Black Sea basins to accommodate the excess population of individual states. Infanticide and abortion were encouraged in some Greek city states in order to keep population down.

An important example of mandated population control is People's Republic of China's one-child policy, in which having more than one child is made extremely unattractive. This has led to allegations that practices like forced abortions, forced sterilization, and infanticide are used as a result of the policy. The country's sex ratio at birth of 114 boys to 100 girls may be evidence that the latter is often sex-selective. However, other countries without a one-child policy also have similar sex ratios but for different reasons such as nutrition.

It is helpful to distinguish between fertility control as individual decision-making and population control as a governmental or state-level policy of regulating population growth. Fertility control may occur when individuals or couples or families take steps to decrease or to regulate the timing of their own child-bearing. In Ansley Coale's oft-cited formulation, three preconditions for a sustained decline in fertility are: (1) acceptance of calculated choice (as opposed to fate or chance or divine will) as a valid element in fertility, (2) perceived advantages from reduced fertility, and (3) knowledge and mastery of effective techniques of control. In contrast to a society with natural fertility, a society that desires to limit fertility and has the means to do so may use those means to delay childbearing, space childbearing, or stop childbearing. Delaying sexual intercourse (or marriage), or the adoption of natural or artificial means of contraception are most often an individual or family decision, not a matter of a state policy or societal-wide sanctions. On the other hand, individuals who assume some sense of control over their own fertility can also accelerate the frequency or success of child-bearing through planning.

At the societal level, declining fertility is almost an inevitable result of growing secular education of women. However, the exercise of moderate to high levels of fertility control does not necessarily imply low fertility rates. Even among societies that exercise substantial fertility control, societies with an equal ability to exercise fertility control (to determine how many children to have and when to bear them) may display widely different levels of fertility (numbers of children borne) associated with individual and cultural preferences for the number of children or size of families.

In contrast to fertility control, which is mainly an individual-level decision, governments may attempt to exercise population control by increasing access to means of contraception or by other population policies and programs. The idea of "population control" as a governmental or societal-level regulation of population growth does not require "fertility control" in the sense that it has been defined above, since a state can affect the growth of a society's population even if that society practices little fertility control. It's also important to embrace policies favoring population increase as an aspect of population control, and not to assume that states want to control population only by limiting its growth. To stimulate population growth, governments may support not only immigration but also pronatalist policies such as tax benefits, financial awards, paid work leaves, and childcare to encourage the bearing of additional children. Such policies have been pursued in recent years in France and Sweden, for example. With the same goal of increasing population growth, on occasion governments have sought to limit the use of abortion or modern means of birth control. An example was Romania's 1966 ban on access to contraception and abortion on demand.

In ecology, population control is on occasions considered to be done solely by predators, diseases, parasites, and environmental factors. In a constant environment, population control is regulated by the availability of food, water, and safety. The maximum number of a species or individuals that can be supported in a certain area is called the carrying capacity. At many times human effects on animal and plant populations are also considered. Migrations of animals may be seen as a natural way of population control, for the food on land is more abundant on some seasons. The area of the migrations' start is left to reproduce the food supply for large mass of animals next time around. See also immigration.

India is another example where the government has taken measures to reduce the country’s population. Concerns that the rapidly growing population would adversely affect economic growth and living standards caused India to implement an official family planning program in the late 1950s and early 1960s; it was the first country in the world to do so.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Mon Jul 6 06:34:14 2009

How would Population be affected by replacement level fertility?
Q. Suppose that all women in the world today began bearing children at replacement- level fertility rates of 2.1 children per woman. Explain why this would not immediately stop global population growth. About how long would it take for the population to stabilize.
Asked by April S - Thu Nov 13 12:56:35 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Perhaps homework should be researched and submitted by the student, rather than perjuring other's intellectual property. Just a thought.
Answered by TacoMagic - Thu Nov 13 13:00:03 2008

What is the population of mountain goats in a particular alpine region?
Q. Homework Help!! I need to find out how many mountain goats or other animals that live in the alpine region there are so that i can make a comparison to say that alpine regions have limited oxygen therefore the population of animals that live there is significantly smaller than the same species living on land. Please include your source, thanks!
Asked by Mag_An - Thu May 3 04:04:44 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Um, you are on the right track, but it's not just the oxygen. Remember plants "inhale" CO2 and there is not much of that either. Alpine animals have to deal with two types of problems: the cold and too much high UV wavelengths. This is because there is less atmosphere to filter UV rays from the sun. There are only warm blooded animals in the Alpine biome, although there are insects. Alpine animals adapt to the cold by hibernating, migrating to lower, warmer areas, or insulating their bodies with layers of fat. Animals will also tend to have shorter legs, tails, and ears, in order to reduce heat loss. Alpine animals also have larger lungs, more blood cells and hemoglobin because of the increase of pressure and lack of oxygen at higher… [cont.]
Answered by roscoedeadbeat - Thu May 3 04:18:48 2007

What is the % of a population that should be randomly tested for a scientific survey?
Q. I need to take a random survey in our county. What percentage of the population should I ask in order to have an appropriate sampling?
Asked by boredorwhat? - Sat Dec 9 21:33:37 2006 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Use this formula. n=Z^2a/2/4E^2 n= sample size Z^2a/2= your Z score, or area under the normal curve. Will depend on your confidence interval. Say, wanting 90% of data within 3 std of mean 4E^2 4 times acceptable error squared. Set error at 0.05, which is standard. You need a Z score chart and a rudimentary knowledge of statistics, but this formula save much money on too large a sample size, or too small a size.
Answered by jonmcn49 - Sat Dec 9 23:39:39 2006

From Yahoo Answer Search: "Population"
Mon Jul 6 13:52:18 2009

Waltham's population exceeds 60000 - Boston Globe
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Waltham's population exceeds 6000

Boston Globe

Waltham's population edged above 6000 as of July 2008, growing slightly in the eight years since the government last compiled census data, according to a ...

Rate of population growth lowest in decades Carroll County Times

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Census Bureau: World's 65 and Older Population Will Triple by 2050 Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone

Le Mars Daily Sentinel  - Idaho Mountain Express and Guide  - Green Bay Press Gazette  - Wayne Independent

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Dolan: open space, parking ban keep population steady - Boston Globe
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Dolan: open space, parking ban keep population steady

Boston Globe

Melrose had a population of 26708 in 2008, down from 27134 in 2000, according to the latest estimate. Dolan said he expects the number in Melrose to climb ...
NOAA Reports Bay's Crab Population Rebounds but Juvenile Numbers ... - NOAA
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NOAA Reports Bay's Crab Population Rebounds but Juvenile Numbers ...

NOAA

While the overall crab population in the Chesapeake Bay rebounded significantly last year, the number of juvenile crabs remained well below the historical ...



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From Google News Search: "Population"
Thu Jul 9 19:32:04 2009

world top ten countries with largest urban population map jpg
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Western Europe population

Iran Population Density gif
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Iran Population density

From Yahoo Image Search: "Population"
Fri Jul 10 09:38:59 2009

Streetsblog New York City Cities See Population Gains But What ...
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Streetsblog New York City Cities See Population Gains But What ...

Elana Schor

Wed, 01 Jul 2009 18:05:12 GM

And even if urban . populations. continue to swell over the next two years, it's still highly likely that western and southern states -- where the housing bubble was largest and sprawl remains the norm -- will gain seats in Congress. ...

Demographic Winter/Demographic Bomb Two New Videos Exposing the ...
righttolife.org.nz
Demographic Winter/Demographic Bomb Two New Videos Exposing the ...

Chris

ue, 07 Jul 2009 10:37:10 GM

Contrary to popular belief, it is not a . population. explosion problem that the world is facing but entirely the opposite. A newly released documentary video by.

Disease Management Care Blog: A Summary of the Latest Population ...
diseasemanagementcareblog.blogspot.com
Disease Management Care Blog: A Summary of the Latest Population ...

Jaan Sidorov

Sun, 05 Jul 2009 22:20:00 GM

The latest issue of . Population. Health Management is out and you'd read it if you weren't so busy with other stuff. After all, PHM is your window into the latest goings-on in the disease management community, its information gives you ...

From Google Blog Search: "Population"
Wed Jul 8 18:57:49 2009