population density

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Related Topics:
population
density-dependent factor

population density, the number of individuals of a certain species per unit area. It can be expressed by the formula D p = N i / A where Dp is population density, Ni is the number of individuals of the species in question, and A is the area expressed in square units, often square kilometers (km2) or square miles (miles2). When analyzing human populations, the related measures of agricultural density and physiological density are often preferred. Agricultural density is the number of farmers per unit of arable land and is used to study the productivity of farms. Physiological density is the number of individuals per unit of arable land and is used to examine how many people a unit of agricultural land supports.

Uses

Administrative uses

Population density is used to understand human geography. A number of countries collect data on their population, often through routine censuses, which are then combined with area measurements to understand the population density of the country and its administrative divisions. Governments, on both national and local levels, use this information to allocate resources, determine administrative or electoral districts, and make decisions regarding urban planning. The United Nations Statistics Division collects statistical information, including population density, and uses it to track development goals.

In the sciences

Population density is used in a variety of ways in the social and biological sciences. In the social sciences population density is concerned with the number of humans who lived or are living in a certain area. It is frequently used in studies of urbanization, which may consider data from time periods ranging from the urban revolution to modernization. The population density of human settlements is also used in studies of infectious disease and how environmental factors affect its spread among people as well as in studies that track the impact of crowded or sparse environments on mental health.

common wildebeest
More From Britannica
population ecology: Population density and growth

Ecologists use population density as part of population ecology, which studies the distribution and abundance of animal and plant populations. Both low and high population densities can present challenges for a species. Increased competition for food, predation, migration, and disease are common in areas with high population densities. However, in areas where a species has a low population density, individuals may struggle to find mates. Population density is also used to calculate carrying capacity.

Problems in population density

Population density is an imperfect measure. It can obscure differences in settlement intensity within a unit of land. If, for example, an area of land contains both city and countryside and a simple population density is calculated, those who live in the city will appear to live in a lower-density area than they actually do, while those in towns and villages will appear to live in a higher-density area. Population-weighted densities, which weight different densities by their population sizes, can be used to counter this distortion. Censuses and other measures of population may struggle to accurately count certain populations, particularly mobile populations such as nomadic groups, migrants, and refugees. Individuals without housing and those who live in settlements that are not recognized by governmental authorities are often undercounted as well. Some studies that consider population density, particularly those focusing on animals, use sampling to estimate the number of individuals in the area of interest and so are subject to sampling error, which happens because samples contain only a fraction of values in a population and are thus not perfectly representative of the entire set.

Examples

The table below demonstrates the calculation of the population density for a sample of 10 regions.

Sample list of population densities
region population (2024 estimate) total land area population density (population/total land area)
Macau 644,426 people 28.2 km2 22,851.99 people/km2
India 1,409,128,296 people 2,973,193 km2 473.94 people/km2
China 1,416,043,270 people 9,326,410 km2 151.83 people/km2
Ireland 5,233,461 people 68,883 km2 75.97 people/km2
South Africa 60,442,647 people 1,214,470 km2 49.77 people/km2
United States 341,963,408 people 9,147,593 km2 37.38 people/km2
Brazil 220,051,512 people 8,358,140 km2 26.33 people/km2
Australia 26,768,598 people 7,682,300 km2 3.48 people/km2
Mongolia 3,281,676 people 1,553,556 km2 2.11 people/km2
Greenland 57,751 people 2,166,086 km2 0.03 people/km2
Teagan Wolter