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Unit 1: APES

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Title: Unit 1: APES


1
Unit 1 APES
  • J.R. Arnold High School
  • Living in the Environment by Miller, 14th Edition

2
Chapter 1
  • Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and
    Sustainability

3
Introduction
  • Environment
  • External conditions that affect living organisms
  • Ecology
  • Study of relationships between living organisms
    and their environment
  • Environmental Science
  • Interdisciplinary study that examines the role of
    humans on the Earth
  • Environmentalism
  • A social movement dedicated to protect the
    earths life support systems for us and other
    species.

4
Environmental science
  • is an interdisciplinary field, drawing on many
    diverse disciplines.

5
Environmental science
  • is NOT the same as environmentalism.
  • It is science, NOT advocacy.

6
The nature of science
  • A systematic process for learning about the world
    and testing our understanding of it
  • A dynamic process of observation, testing, and
    discovery
  • And the accumulated body of knowledge that
    results from this process

7
Applications of science
  • Policy decisions and management practices are
    applications of science.
  • Prescribed burning, used to restore forest
    ecosystems altered by human suppression of fire.

8
Applications of science
  • Technology is another application of
    science.Energy-efficient methanol-powered
    fuel cell car from DaimlerChrysler

9
Solar Capital and Natural Capital
  • Solar Capital
  • Energy from the sun
  • Provides 99 of the energy used on earth
  • Natural Capital
  • Natural Resources and Economic Services

10
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11
Sustainability
  • The ability of a specified system to survive and
    function over time
  • 1,000,000
  • 10 interest
  • Live on up to 100,000 per year

12
Sustainable Resource Harvest
  • Certain quantity of that resource can be
    harvested each year and not be depleted over a
    specified period
  • Sustainable supply of fish or timber

13
Easter Island
  • A unsustainable society
  • Used up the trees resources
  • A lesson to us to use the
  • worlds resources sustainably

14
Sustainable Earth
  • Earths supplies of resources
  • Processes that make up earth capital are used and
    maintained over a specified period

15
Sustainable Society
  • Manages economy and population size without
    exceeding all or part of the planets ability to
  • Absorb environmental insults
  • Replenish resources
  • Sustain human and other forms of life over a
    specified period (100s-1,000s of years)

16
Linear Growth
  • Quantity increases by a constant amount per unit
    of time
  • 1,2,3,4,5,
  • 1,3,5,7,9,
  • When plotted on a graph, growth of money yields a
    fairly straight line sloping upward

17
Exponential Growth
  • Starts off slowly, doubles a few times, then
    grows to enormous numbers
  • Quantity increases by a fixed percentage of the
    whole in a given time as each increase is applied
    to the base for further growth

18
Exponential Growth
  • Growth yields a J-shaped curve
  • Describes the human population problem that
    disturbs the environment today

19
Rule of 70
  • How long does it take to double?
  • Resource use
  • Population size
  • Money in a savings account
  • Rule of 70
  • 70 divided by the percentage growth rate
    doubling time in years
  • 70 / 7 means it takes ten years to double

Homework YouTube- rule of 70- Albert Bartlett
Most important video you will ever see 9 min.
20
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21
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22
Global human population growth
  • Our population has skyrocketed to over 6
    billion.
  • The agricultural and industrial revolutions drove
    population growth.
  • The industrial revolution entailed a shift to an
    urban society powered by fossil fuels.
  • The worlds population is growing exponentially
    at a rate of about 1.25 a year

23
Thomas Malthus (1766-1834)
  • Population growth will lead to starvation, war,
    disease.
  • Death rates check population unless birth rates
    are lowered.
  • Today, Paul Ehrlich (The Population Bomb, 1968)
    is called neo-Malthusian.

24
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25
Developed Countries (1.2 billion people)
  • They include the US, Canada, Japan, the former
    Soviet Union, and European countries.
  • They have high average GNPs per person.
  • They are highly industrialized.
  • They make up about 19 of the world's population.
  • They use about 88 of the world's resources.
  • higher average life expectancy

26
Developing Countries (5.2 billion people)
  • They are primarily in Africa, Asia, and Latin
    America
  • They tend to be highly agricultural
  • They makeup about 81 of the worlds population
  • They use about 12 of the world's resources.
  • higher percentage of the population under age 15

27
Wealth Gap
  • The gap between the per capita GNP of the rich,
    middle-income and poor has widened
  • More than 1 billion people survive on less than
    one dollar per day
  • Situation has worsened since 1980

28
Natural resources
  • Renewable resources like sunlight cannot be
    depleted.
  • Nonrenewable resources like oil CAN be depleted.
  • Resources like timber and clean water are
    renewable only if we do not overuse them.

29
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30
Nonrenewable Resources
  • Nonrenewable/Exhaustible Resources
  • Exist in a fixed quantity in the earths crust
    and can be used up
  • Mineral
  • Any hard, usually crystalline material that is
    formed naturally
  • Reserves
  • Known deposits from which a usable mineral can be
    profitably extracted at current prices

31
Biodiversity
  • Genetic Diversity
  • Variety in a genetic makeup among individuals
    within a single species
  • Species Diversity
  • Variety among the species or distinct types of
    living organisms found in different habitats of
    the planet
  • Ecological Diversity
  • Variety of forests, deserts, grasslands, streams,
    lakes, oceans, wetlands, and other communities

32
The tragedyof the commons
  • Garrett Hardin, 1968
  • In a commons open to all, unregulated use will
    deplete limited resources.

33
Environmental Degradation
  • Common Property Resources
  • Tragedy of the Commons
  • Resources owned by none, but available to all
    users free of charge
  • May convert potentially renewable resources into
    nonrenewable resources

34
The ecological footprint
  • The ecological footprint is the area of land
    and water needed to produce the resources a
    person or population uses, plus the amount needed
    to dispose of their waste.

35
Ecological Footprint Ecological Footprint
36
What is your ecological footprint?
  • www.ecofoot.org/
  • How many Earths does it take to support you
    lifestyle?
  • Complete quiz and print results bring in
    tomorrow.

37
Pollution
  • Any addition to air, water, soil, or food that
    threatens the health, survival, or activities of
    humans or other living organisms
  • Solid, liquid, or gaseous by-products or wastes

38
Point Source Pollutants
  • From a single, identifiable sources
  • Smokestack of a power plant
  • Drainpipe of a meat-packing plant
  • Exhaust pipe of an automobile

39
Nonpoint Source Pollutants
  • Dispersed and often difficult to identify sources
  • Runoff of fertilizers and pesticides
  • Storm Drains (1 source of oil spills in oceans)

40
Negativity of Pollutant
  • Chemical Nature
  • How active and harmful it is to living organisms
  • Concentration
  • Amount per unit volume or weight of air, water,
    soil or body weight
  • Persistence
  • Time it stays in the air, water, soil or body

41
Solutions Pollution Prevention
  • Input Pollution Control or Throughput Solution
  • Slows or eliminates the production of pollutants,
    often by switching to less harmful chemicals or
    processes

42
Solution Four Rs of Resource Management
  • Refuse (dont use)
  • Reduce (limit use)
  • Reuse
  • Using a resource over and over in the same form
  • Recycle
  • Collecting and reprocessing a resource into new
    products

43
Solution Pollution cleanup
  • Output Pollution Cleanup
  • Involves cleaning up pollutants after they have
    been produced
  • Most expensive and time consuming

44
Air Pollution
  • Global climate change
  • Stratospheric ozone depletion
  • Urban air pollution
  • Acid deposition
  • Outdoor pollutants
  • Indoor pollutants
  • Noise

45
Water Pollution
  • Sediment
  • Nutrient overload
  • Toxic chemicals
  • Infectious agents
  • Oxygen depletion
  • Pesticides
  • Oil spills
  • Excess heat

46
Biodiversity Depletion
  • Habitat destruction
  • Habitat degradation
  • Invasion of nonnative species
  • Extinction

Biodiversity loss is perhaps our biggest
environmental problem, because we cannot correct
our mistakes later Once a species is extinct,
it is gone forever.
47
Climate
  • Global climate change may be our most pressing
    pollution challenge.
  • It likely contributes to glacial melting,
    sea-level rise, impacts on wildlife and crops,
    and increased destructive weather.
  • Since the industrial revolution, atmospheric
    carbon dioxide concentrations have risen by 31
    to a level not seen in over 400,000 years.

48
Food Supply Problems
  • Overgrazing
  • Farmland loss and degradation
  • Wetlands loss and degradation
  • Overfishing
  • Coastal pollution
  • Soil erosion

49
Food Supply Problems
  • Soil salinization
  • Soil waterlogging
  • Water shortages
  • Groundwater depletion
  • Loss of biodiversity
  • Poor nutrition

50
Waste Production
  • Solid Waste
  • Hazardous waste

51
Environmental Tragedies
  • Bhopal, India-1984 Union Carbide pesticide plant
    exploded caused lots of problems largest
    industrial accident of all time, resulted in
    20,000 deaths.
  • Love Canal, NY- 1978 chemicals buried in old
    canal and school homes built over it causing
    birth defects cancer
  • Chernobyl, Ukraine- 1986 Nuclear power plant
    explosion worst ever
  • Three mile Island, PA-1979 nuclear power plant
    melt down
  • Lake Erie- Declared dead in 1970

52
Major Causes to Environmental Problems
  • Population growth
  • Poverty
  • Unsustainable resource use
  • Poor environmental accounting
  • Ecological ignorance

53
Environmental Worldviews
  • How people think the world works
  • What they think their role in the world should be
  • What they see as right and wrong environmental
    behavior (environmental ethics)

54
Planetary Management Worldview
  • Increasingly common during the past 50 years.
  • We are the planets most important species
  • We are in charge of the rest of nature

55
Planetary Management Worldview
  • There is always more
  • All economic growth is good
  • Potential for economic growth is limitless
  • Our success depends on how well we manage earths
    system for our benefit

56
Earth-Wisdom Worldview
  • Nature exists for all of the earths species, not
    just for us
  • There is not always more
  • Not all forms of economic growth is beneficial to
    the environment
  • Our success depends on learning to cooperate with
    one another and with the earth

57
Working with the Earth
  • Earth Wisdom
  • Learning as much as we can about how the earth
    sustains itself
  • Adapt to ever-changing environmental conditions
  • Integrating such lessons from nature into the
    ways we think and act

58
Utilitarianism
  • Is the belief that something is right if it
    produces the greatest good for the greatest
    number of people for the longest time.
  • Is the management of a resource to make certain
    to produces the greatest benefit to humans in the
    future.
  • Is the concept that the land should be kept in
    its natural state-never touched or developed

Conservation
Preservation
59
Environmentally-Sustainable Economic Development
Fig. 1-13 p. 17
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