Q.104 A population of rabbits was determined to have a birth rate of 200 and mortality rate of 50 per year. If the initial population size is 4000 individuals, after 2 years of non-interfered breeding the final population size will be _______________.

Q.104 A population of rabbits was determined to have a birth rate of 200 and mortality rate of 50
per year. If the initial population size is 4000 individuals, after 2 years of noninterfered
breeding the final population size will be _______________.

Final Answer: Population after 2 years = 25,000 individuals

In this problem, we calculate the population growth of rabbits under
non-interfered breeding conditions, meaning unlimited resources,
no density dependence, and constant per capita birth and death rates.


Given Data

  • Birth rate = 200 per 100 individuals per year
  • Mortality rate = 50 per 100 individuals per year
  • Initial population (N0) = 4000
  • Time (t) = 2 years

Step-by-Step Solution

1. Per Capita Rates

Per capita birth rate:

b = 200 / 100 = 2

Per capita mortality rate:

d = 50 / 100 = 0.5

2. Net Growth Rate

Net growth rate (r) is given by:

r = b − d = 2 − 0.5 = 1.5

This corresponds to a 150% increase per year.


Growth Model Used

Since growth is unrestricted and rates are given on a per-year basis,
discrete exponential growth is appropriate:

Nt = N0(1 + r)t


Year-wise Population Calculation

After Year 1

N1 = 4000 × (1 + 1.5) = 4000 × 2.5 = 10,000

After Year 2

N2 = 10,000 × 2.5 = 25,000

✔️ Final population after 2 years = 25,000 rabbits


Why Exponential Growth?

The birth and death rates are given on a per capita basis,
so population increase is proportional to the current population size.
This causes compounding growth, similar to compound interest.

The phrase “non-interfered breeding” implies:

  • No density dependence
  • No migration
  • No resource limitation

Common Incorrect Approaches Explained

  • Linear growth: Adding a fixed number each year ignores compounding
  • Ignoring compounding: Underestimates or overestimates population
  • Continuous model (ert): Gives ~25,949, but discrete model fits annual rates better

Exam Relevance (CSIR NET / GATE)

  • Understand difference between per capita and absolute rates
  • Choose discrete vs. continuous models correctly
  • Frequently tested in Population Ecology
  • Final answers are usually rounded to whole numbers

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