Negative density-dependence, or density-dependent restriction, describes a situation in which population growth is curtailed by crowding, predators and competition. In
cell biology, it describes the reduction in
cell division. When a cell
population reaches a certain density, the amount of required
growth factors and
nutrients available to each cell becomes insufficient to allow continued
cell growth. This is also true for other organisms because an increased density means an increase in
intraspecific competition. Greater competition means an individual has a decreased contribution to the next generation i.e. offspring. Density-dependent mortality can be overcompensating, undercompensating or exactly compensating. There also exists
density-independent inhibition, where other factors such as
weather or environmental conditions and
disturbances may affect a population's
carrying capacity. An example of a density-dependent variable is crowding and competition.
Examples Density-dependent
fecundity exists, where the birth rate falls as competition increases. In the context of gastrointestinal nematodes, the weight of female
Ascaris lumbricoides and its rates of egg production decrease as host infection intensity increases. Thus, the per-capita contribution of each worm to transmission decreases as a function of infection intensity. Parasite-induced vector mortality is a form of negative density-dependence. The
Onchocerciasis life cycle involves transmission via a
black fly vector. In this life-cycle, the life expectancy of the black fly vector decreases as the worm load ingested by the vector increases. Because
O. volvulus microfilariae require at least seven days to mature into infective L3 larvae in the black fly, the worm load is restricted to levels that allow the black fly to survive for long enough to pass infective L3 larvae onto humans. ==In macroparasite life cycles==