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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Population_pressure
rdfs:label
Presión demográfica Population pressure
rdfs:comment
Se denomina presión demográfica al impacto que el ser humano ejerce sobre los recursos naturales de la Tierra. Estos efectos resultan en consecuencias económicas, sociales, psicológicas y políticas. La presión demográfica, producto tanto del incremento de la población como de cambios en su distribución y densidad, es un factor relevante en la evolución de la miseria, las modificaciones de las condiciones del medio ambiente y el uso de los recursos naturales.​ Population pressure, a term summarizing the stress brought about by an excessive population density and its consequences, is used both in conjunction with human overpopulation and with other animal populations that suffer from too many individuals per area (or volume in the case of aquatic organisms). In the case of humans, absolute numbers of individuals may lead to population pressure, but the same is true for overexploitation and overconsumption of available resources and ensuing environmental degradation by otherwise-normal population densities. Similarly, when the carrying capacity of the environment goes down, unchanged population numbers may prove too high and again produce significant pressure.
dcterms:subject
dbc:Population_ecology
dbo:wikiPageID
66040985
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1035622622
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dbr:Animal_population dbr:Aquatic_organism dbr:Human_overpopulation dbr:Population_decline dbr:Extinction dbr:Environmental_degradation dbr:ScienceDirect dbr:Thomas_Malthus dbr:Population_growth dbc:Population_ecology dbr:Land_development dbr:Migration_(ecology) dbr:Land_conversion dbr:Overconsumption dbr:Pressure dbr:Overshoot_(population) dbr:Overexploitation dbr:Sustainable_population dbr:Charles_Darwin dbr:Land_loss dbr:Carrying_capacity dbr:Struggle_for_existence dbr:Malthusian_catastrophe dbr:An_Essay_on_the_Principle_of_Population dbr:Population_density
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dbo:abstract
Population pressure, a term summarizing the stress brought about by an excessive population density and its consequences, is used both in conjunction with human overpopulation and with other animal populations that suffer from too many individuals per area (or volume in the case of aquatic organisms). In the case of humans, absolute numbers of individuals may lead to population pressure, but the same is true for overexploitation and overconsumption of available resources and ensuing environmental degradation by otherwise-normal population densities. Similarly, when the carrying capacity of the environment goes down, unchanged population numbers may prove too high and again produce significant pressure. "Pressure" is to be understood metaphorically and hints at the analogy between a gas or fluid that under pressure will tend to escape a bounded container. Similarly, "population pressure" in animal populations in general usually leads to migration activity, and in humans, it may additionally cause land loss because of land conversion of previously-uninhabited areas and development. When no space for evading the pressure is available, another severe consequence can be the reduction or even extinction of the population under pressure. Based on ideas by Thomas Malthus as laid out in An Essay on the Principle of Population, Charles Darwin theorized that population pressure must generate a struggle for existence in which many individuals die, and better-adapted variants are more likely to survive and to reproduce. Se denomina presión demográfica al impacto que el ser humano ejerce sobre los recursos naturales de la Tierra. Estos efectos resultan en consecuencias económicas, sociales, psicológicas y políticas. La presión demográfica, producto tanto del incremento de la población como de cambios en su distribución y densidad, es un factor relevante en la evolución de la miseria, las modificaciones de las condiciones del medio ambiente y el uso de los recursos naturales.​
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3129
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wikipedia-en:Population_pressure