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populaties

Populaties are the plural form of populatie in Dutch, referring to groups of organisms or items that constitute a population within a defined area or context. The term derives from Latin populatio, via French population, and is used across biology, ecology, demography, and statistics.

In biology and ecology, a population is the group of individuals of the same species that occupy

In statistics and demography, a population refers to the entire set of items or individuals under study,

In Dutch usage, populaties is used for populations in ecology, microbiology, and social sciences, while bevolkingen

a
given
area
and
can
interbreed.
Population-level
attributes
include
size,
density,
geographic
distribution,
age
structure,
and
genetic
composition,
while
population
dynamics
describe
changes
over
time
due
to
births,
deaths,
immigration,
emigration,
and
environmental
factors.
Common
concepts
include
carrying
capacity,
growth
rates,
and
subpopulations
or
demes
within
a
species.
with
samples
drawn
from
it
for
analysis.
The
population
may
be
subdivided
into
subpopulations
to
analyze
differences
in
characteristics
or
outcomes,
and
to
support
inferential
statistics
and
demographic
planning.
is
more
often
used
for
human
populations.
The
distinction
reflects
differences
between
general
population
groups
and
human
demographic
contexts,
though
the
terms
can
overlap
in
certain
scientific
discussions.
See
also
population
(biology),
population
genetics,
and
demography.