AP Environmental Science Unit 3 ReviewPopulations

Verified for the 2027 examCompiled by AP educators~10–15% of the exam
Pep mascot
Upgrade your Fiveable account to print any study guide

Download study guides as beautiful PDFs See example

Print or share PDFs with your students

Always prints our latest, updated content

Mark up and annotate as you study

Click below to go to billing portal → update your plan → choose Yearly→ and select "Fiveable Share Plan". Only pay the difference

Plan is open to all students, teachers, parents, etc
Pep mascot
Upgrade your Fiveable account to export vocabulary

Download study guides as beautiful PDFs See example

Print or share PDFs with your students

Always prints our latest, updated content

Mark up and annotate as you study

Plan is open to all students, teachers, parents, etc

AP Environmental Science Unit 3, Populations, covers carrying capacity and population growth across 9 topics worth 10-15% of the AP exam, showing how environmental limits shape the size and survival of species over time. You'll work through survivorship curves, K- and r-selected species, and age structure diagrams before shifting to human-focused topics. APES Unit 3 ties total fertility rate and the demographic transition model directly to real resource pressures on ecosystems.

unit 3 review

AP Environmental Science Unit 3, Populations, is about how and why the number of organisms in a place changes over time, and what sets the ceiling on that growth. The single biggest idea is carrying capacity, the maximum population an environment can support before resources run out and the population crashes. This unit is 10-15% of the AP exam, and it bridges from natural species (survivorship curves, K- and r-selected strategies) to human populations (fertility rates, age structure, and the demographic transition).

What this unit covers

Reproductive strategies and survival

How a species reproduces tells you how its population behaves. This is the core distinction the unit keeps coming back to.

  • Generalist species eat many foods and tolerate many conditions, so they thrive when habitats are changing (think raccoons, coyotes). Specialist species are picky and do well only in stable, constant habitats (think pandas eating bamboo).
  • K-selected species are large, have few offspring, invest heavily in each one, mature slowly, and live long. They live near carrying capacity (K) where competition is high. Elephants and humans fit here.
  • r-selected species are small, pump out tons of offspring, invest almost nothing in each, and have short lives. They bounce back fast after disturbance. Insects and weeds fit here.
  • Survivorship curves plot how many members of a cohort (a same-age group) survive over time. Type I means high survival until old age then a sharp drop (humans, K-selected). Type II means a steady, constant death rate (many birds). Type III means most die young but survivors live long (fish, oysters, r-selected).

Limits to growth

No population grows forever. Resources and space cap it, and the cap has consequences.

  • Carrying capacity (K) is the population size an environment can sustain long-term given food, water, and space.
  • Overshoot happens when a population blows past K. Resources get depleted faster than they regenerate.
  • Dieback is the crash that follows overshoot, often severe, driven by famine, disease, and conflict. The population drops back toward or below K.
  • When resources are abundant, growth accelerates. When the resource base shrinks, unequal distribution of those resources gets worse, which intensifies the pressure on the population.
  • The total resource base is finite over every timescale, so growth is always ultimately limited.

Human population structure and growth

The same rules apply to people, but humans have data that lets you forecast where a population is headed.

  • Age structure diagrams (population pyramids) show the breakdown of a population by age and sex. A wide base means lots of young people and rapid growth ahead. Straight sides mean a stable population. A narrow base means decline.
  • Total fertility rate (TFR) is the average number of children a woman has. It's pushed down by later age at first child, more education for women, access to family planning, and government policy.
  • Replacement-level fertility is roughly 2.1 children per woman, the rate that keeps a population stable.
  • Infant mortality rate falls when mothers get good healthcare and nutrition, and changes in it ripple through fertility and growth.
  • Birth rates, death rates, family planning, nutrition, education, and postponing marriage all decide whether a human population grows or shrinks.

Density and the demographic transition

Two more frameworks finish the unit: what limits growth as populations get crowded, and how growth patterns change as countries develop.

  • Density-dependent factors (disease, competition, predation) hit harder as a population gets crowded. Density-independent factors (natural disasters, weather) hit regardless of population size.
  • Malthusian theory argues human population grows faster than food supply, so resource limits eventually check it.
  • The demographic transition model (DTM) tracks a country moving from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates as it industrializes, through four stages.
  • Developing countries tend to have higher infant mortality and more children in the workforce than developed countries.

Unit 3, Populations at a glance

ConceptKey ideaPattern/example
Generalist vs. specialistDiet and tolerance set adaptabilityGeneralists win in changing habitats; specialists in stable ones
K-selectedFew offspring, heavy investment, near KType I or II curve; elephants
r-selectedMany offspring, no investment, fast reboundType III curve; insects, fish
Carrying capacity (K)Max sustainable populationOvershoot leads to dieback
Age structure diagramShape predicts growthWide base = rapid growth
Total fertility rateChildren per woman2.1 = replacement level
Demographic transitionDevelopment lowers birth and death ratesFour-stage DTM

Why Unit 3, Populations matters in APES

Populations is where the abstract energy-and-matter rules of ecology become countable. Every later unit about resource use, pollution, and global change traces back to one driver: how many organisms (especially people) there are, and how fast that number is rising.

  • It anchors the big idea of energy transfer and resource limits, showing that a finite resource base caps every population, human or not.
  • It connects interactions in ecosystems (EIN) to real human demographics, so fertility and age structure become tools for predicting environmental pressure.
  • It makes human impact measurable. Population size and growth rate are the multipliers behind nearly every environmental problem you study later.
  • It builds the habit of reading graphs and diagrams (growth curves, survivorship curves, age pyramids) that show up across the whole exam.

How this unit connects across the course

  • Builds on Units 1 and 2 (Ecosystems and Biodiversity): energy flow, food webs, and species interactions explain why carrying capacity exists. Predation and competition you met there become the density-dependent limits here.
  • Drives Unit 5 (Land and Water Use): more people means more demand for farmland, cities, and resources. Urbanization and resource extraction scale directly with the population growth you model in this unit.
  • Sets up Unit 6 (Energy Resources and Consumption): population size times per-person consumption equals total energy demand. Growth rates here become consumption pressure there.
  • Feeds Unit 9 (Global Change): human population growth is the underlying multiplier behind greenhouse gas emissions, deforestation, and global-scale environmental change.

Key equations and processes

  • Population growth rate = (births + immigration) - (deaths + emigration). Tells you whether a population is growing, stable, or shrinking.
  • Exponential growth produces a J-shaped curve when resources are unlimited and growth is at a constant rate.
  • Logistic growth produces an S-shaped curve that levels off at carrying capacity (K) as resources run low.
  • Rule of 70: doubling time (years) = 70 / annual growth rate (%). Quick way to find how long a population takes to double.
  • Natural increase rate = birth rate - death rate, usually given per 1,000 or as a percent. The core measure of whether a human population grows on its own.
  • Overshoot then dieback is the process where a population exceeds K, depletes resources, and crashes. Know the cause-and-effect chain.
  • Demographic transition (four stages) is the process of falling birth and death rates as a country industrializes. Be able to match a stage to its growth pattern.

Unit 3, Populations on the AP exam

This unit is 10-15% of the exam and shows up in both multiple-choice and free-response questions. Population content is graph-heavy, so expect to read and interpret stimulus material rather than just recall definitions.

  • Interpret diagrams. You'll read age structure diagrams to predict whether a population is growing, stable, or declining, and identify survivorship curves as Type I, II, or III.
  • Solve and calculate. Free-response questions often ask you to compute a growth rate, a doubling time using the rule of 70, or a percent change, and then show your setup with correct units.
  • Explain cause and effect. Expect prompts that ask why a population overshoots carrying capacity and then experiences dieback, or how a factor like female education lowers total fertility rate.
  • Apply the demographic transition. Place a country in a DTM stage from its birth and death rates, and explain what development does to those rates.
  • Connect to human impact. Questions frequently link population growth to a downstream environmental problem, the kind of analysis that pays off in the free-response section.

When you write free responses, name the mechanism (don't just say "the population goes down," say "lack of resources causes famine, disease, and conflict, leading to dieback") and always include units in calculations.

Essential questions

  • What determines the maximum population an environment can support, and what happens when a population exceeds it?
  • Why do K-selected and r-selected species follow different survivorship curves and respond differently to disturbance?
  • How can you predict a human population's future growth from its age structure and fertility rate?
  • How and why do birth and death rates change as a country industrializes?

Key terms to know

  • Carrying capacity (K): the maximum population size an environment can sustain given available resources.
  • Overshoot: when a population temporarily exceeds its carrying capacity.
  • Dieback: the sharp, often catastrophic population crash that follows overshoot, driven by famine, disease, and conflict.
  • Generalist species: a species with broad diet and habitat tolerance, favored in changing environments.
  • Specialist species: a species with narrow requirements, favored in stable environments.
  • Cohort: a group of individuals of the same age tracked through a survivorship curve.
  • Total fertility rate (TFR): the average number of children a woman has during her reproductive years.
  • Replacement-level fertility: the TFR (about 2.1) that keeps a population stable over time.
  • Infant mortality rate: deaths of infants under one year old per 1,000 live births.
  • Age structure diagram: a graph of a population by age and sex whose shape reveals future growth.
  • Density-dependent factor: a limit (disease, competition) that hits harder as population density rises.
  • Density-independent factor: a limit (natural disaster, weather) that affects a population regardless of its size.
  • Demographic transition model (DTM): a four-stage model of falling birth and death rates as a country industrializes.
  • Malthusian theory: the idea that population grows faster than food supply, so resources eventually limit growth.

Common mix-ups

  • K-selected vs. r-selected: K-selected species live near carrying capacity with few, well-cared-for offspring; r-selected species reproduce fast with many neglected offspring. "K" is for the ones competing at carrying capacity.
  • Exponential vs. logistic growth: exponential is a J-curve with no limit; logistic is an S-curve that flattens at K. Real populations follow logistic because resources are finite.
  • Density-dependent vs. density-independent: a tornado kills the same fraction whether the population is big or small (independent); a disease spreads faster when individuals are packed together (dependent).
  • Carrying capacity is not fixed: K can shift if resources, climate, or habitat change. Don't treat it as a permanent number.

Frequently Asked Questions

What topics are covered in APES Unit 3?

APES Unit 3: Populations covers 9 topics: Generalist and Specialist Species, K-Selected and r-Selected Species, Survivorship Curves, Carrying Capacity, Population Growth and Resource Availability, Age Structure Diagrams, Total Fertility Rate, Human Population Dynamics, and Demographic Transition. Together they explain how and why populations change over time. See the full topic list at /ap-enviro/unit-3.

How much of the APES exam is Unit 3?

Unit 3: Populations makes up 10-15% of the AP Environmental Science exam. That weight covers everything from carrying capacity and population growth to survivorship curves, age structure diagrams, total fertility rate, and the demographic transition. It's a mid-sized unit, but the concepts show up in FRQs and MCQs regularly.

What's on the APES Unit 3 progress check (MCQ and FRQ)?

The APES Unit 3 progress check in AP Classroom has both an MCQ part and an FRQ part drawn from all 9 unit topics. MCQ questions test concepts like carrying capacity, K-selected vs. r-selected species, and survivorship curves. The FRQ section typically asks you to interpret age structure diagrams or analyze population growth scenarios using total fertility rate and demographic transition data. For matched practice questions that mirror the progress check format, visit /ap-enviro/unit-3.

How do I practice APES Unit 3 FRQs?

APES Unit 3 FRQs most often focus on carrying capacity, population growth and resource availability, age structure diagrams, and the demographic transition. Questions typically ask you to interpret a graph or diagram, calculate a value like total fertility rate, or explain how a limiting factor affects a population. To practice, work through past FRQ prompts that involve these topics, write out full explanations (not just labels), and check that each answer ties a cause to an environmental consequence. You can find Unit 3 FRQ practice at /ap-enviro/unit-3.

Where can I find APES Unit 3 practice questions?

The best place to find APES Unit 3 practice questions, including MCQ sets and a practice test, is /ap-enviro/unit-3. That page has multiple-choice questions covering all 9 topics, from carrying capacity and survivorship curves to total fertility rate and the demographic transition. Mixing MCQ practice with FRQ review gives you the best coverage of the 10-15% exam weight this unit carries.

How should I study APES Unit 3?

Start with the big picture: population growth is controlled by carrying capacity and resource availability. Then work through each topic in order. For 3.1-3.2, compare generalist vs. specialist species and K-selected vs. r-selected traits side by side. For 3.3, sketch and label all three survivorship curve types until they're automatic. For 3.6-3.9, practice reading age structure diagrams and connecting total fertility rate to the demographic transition stages. Finish each study session by doing a few MCQs to check your understanding. The full topic list and practice materials are at /ap-enviro/unit-3.

What graphs do I need to know for APES Unit 3?

APES Unit 3 requires you to read and interpret four key graphs. Survivorship curves (Type I, II, and III) show how mortality is distributed across a lifespan. Carrying capacity graphs show logistic population growth as an S-curve that levels off when resources run out. Age structure diagrams (population pyramids) let you predict whether a population is growing, stable, or declining. Demographic transition graphs show how birth rates and death rates shift across four stages of development. On the exam, you'll often be asked to identify which curve or diagram applies to a given scenario and explain what it means for population growth.