Load capacity what it consists of, factors and examples

1887
David Holt

The ecological load capacity or of an ecosystem is the maximum limit growth of a biological population that the environment can support in a given period, without negative effects for that population, or for the environment. This maximum threshold size of individuals of a population that the environment can support depends on the available resources such as water, food, space, among others..

When the ecosystem carrying capacity is exceeded or exceeded, individuals are forced to one of these three alternatives: change their habits, migrate to an area with more resources or decrease the size of the population with the death of many individuals.

Figure 1. Man-made pollution that degrades the environment and reduces its carrying capacity. Source: Pixabay.com

No population can have unlimited growth, since resources are finite and limited. Regarding the human species in particular, it is estimated that the planet Earth can support about 10,000 million individuals.

However, humanity grows exponentially and generates negative effects on the environment, mainly due to industrial activities that involve its degradation, that is, the affectation of the environmental functional integrity..

Article index

  • 1 Factors determining load capacity
    • 1.1 Size of a population
    • 1.2 Growth capacity or biotic potential
    • 1.3 Environmental resistance
    • 1.4 Forms of population growth
    • 1.5 What happens when the load capacity of an environment is exceeded?
  • 2 Examples
    • 2.1 Example I
    • 2.2 Example II
    • 2.3 Example III
  • 3 References

Factors determining load capacity

Size of a population

The size of a population depends on four variables: number of births, number of deaths, number of immigrants, and number of emigrants.

Increases in the size of a population occur with the births of individuals and with the immigration or arrival of individuals from outside environments. The size of the population decreases with deaths and with the emigration or departure of individuals to other environments.

In such a way that the following equality can be established:

Change in population = (births + immigration) - (deaths + emigration)

Growth capacity or biotic potential

The growth capacity (or biotic potential) determines the variation in the population. The intrinsic growth rate of a population is the speed at which the population would grow if the available resources were unlimited..

High population growth rates involve early reproduction, short intervals between generations, a long reproductive life, and high progeny at each reproduction..

As an illustrative example of a high population growth rate, we can cite the house fly, a species with a surprising growth capacity.

In theory, in 13 months the descendants of a fly would reach 5.6 billion individuals and in a few years they could cover the entire surface of the planet; but the reality is that every population has a size limit on its growth.

Figure 2. Housefly (Musca domestica), a species with a very high growth rate. Source: Pixabay.com

Because there are limiting factors such as the amount of water, available light, nutrients, physical space, competitors, and predators, a population has a growth limit..

Environmental resistance

All the limiting factors for the growth of a population make up the so-called environmental resistance. The growth capacity of a population and environmental resistance are the determining factors of carrying capacity..

Forms of population growth

If the environment offers many resources to a population, it is capable of growing at high rates, that is, rapidly. With rapid population growth, resources decrease and become limited; then the growth rate experiences decline and leveling or adjustment.

Exponential growth

A population for which the environment offers few limitations grows at a fixed rate of 1 to 2% per year exponentially. This exponential growth begins slowly and increases rapidly over time; in this case, a graph of the number of individuals as a function of time produces a J-shaped curve.

Logistics growth

The so-called logistic growth presents a first stage of exponential growth which is followed by a stage with a slow, not abrupt, fluctuating decrease in growth until a leveling out in the size of the population is reached..

The decrease or slowdown in growth occurs when the population faces environmental resistance and is approaching the carrying capacity of the environment.

Populations that show logistic growth, after leveling out their growth, experience fluctuations with respect to the ecological carrying capacity.

The graph of the number of individuals versus time, in the case of logistic growth, has an approximate form of S.

¿What happens when the carrying capacity of an ambientand is exceeded?

When a population exceeds the amount of resources available in the environment, many individuals die, thereby reducing the number of individuals and balancing the amount of resources available per individual.

Another alternative for the survival of the population is a change in habits to use resources other than those that have been exhausted. A third alternative is the emigration or movement of individuals to other environments that have more resources..

Examples

As illustrative examples we can analyze some particular cases.

Example I

Populations consume resources and temporarily exceed or exceed the environmental carrying capacity.

These cases occur when there is a delay in reproduction; the period in which the birth rate must decrease and the mortality rate must increase (in response to accelerated consumption of resources), is very long.

In this case, a collapse or drop in the population occurs. However, if the population has the adaptive capacity to exploit other available resources or if the surplus number of individuals can migrate to another environment that offers more resources, the collapse does not occur..

Example II

Populations permanently exceed the environmental carrying capacity.

This case occurs when the population exceeds and causes damage to the carrying capacity, and the habitat is no longer capable of sustaining the high number of individuals that it originally supported..

Overgrazing can deplete areas where grass grows and leave tracts of land free for the growth of other competitive plant species, which are not consumed by livestock. In this case, the environment has reduced its carrying capacity for livestock..

Example III

The human species with the currently dominant economic development model is exceeding the environmental carrying capacity.

This economic model of excessive production and consumption in developed countries requires the use of environmental resources at very high rates, higher than their natural replacement..

Natural resources are finite and economic development raised in this way, supposes unlimited growth, which is impossible. Not only does the human population grow over time, but the resources of the environment are used unevenly, mostly and intensively by the populations of developed countries..

Some authors claim that the development of science and technology will save humanity from collapse. Others predict that humanity as a species is not exempt from reaching the limits that the environment always imposes on all populations..

References

  1. Boutaud, A., Gondran, N. and Brodhag, C. (2006). (Local) environmental quality versus (global) ecological carrying capacity: what might alternative aggregated indicators bring to the debates about environmental Kuznets curves and sustainable development? International Journal of Sustainable Development. 9 (3) doi: 10.1504 / IJSD.2006.01285
  2. Brown, K., Turner, R., Hameed, H. and Bateman, I. (1997). Environmental carrying capacity and tourism development in the Maldives and Nepal. Environmental Conservation, 24 (4), 316-325.
  3. Liu, Y., Zeng, C., Cui, H. and Song, Y. (2018). Sustainable Land Urbanization and Ecological Carrying Capacity: A Spatially Explicit Perspective. Sustainability. 10 (9): 3070-3082. doi: 10.3390 / su10093070
  4. McKindseya, W., Thetmeyerb, H., Landryc, T. and Silvertd, W. (2006). Review of recent carrying capacity models for bivalve culture and recommendations for research and management. Aquaculture. 261 (2): 451-462. doi: 10.1016 / j.aquaculture.2006.06.044
  5. Zeng, C., Liu, Y., Liu, Y., Hu, J., Bai, X. and Yang, B. (2011). An Integrated Approach for Assessing Aquatic Ecological Carrying Capacity: A Case Study of Wujin District in the Tai Lake Basin, China. J. Environ. Res. Public Health. 8 (1): 264-280. doi: 10.3390 / ijerph8010264

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