Title: Ch.6 Humans in the Biosphere
1Ch.6 Humans in the Biosphere
2Natural Ecosystems Processes
- Natural systems have been upset
- humans influence other individuals, other
species, and the nonliving world - Humans in turn are also influenced by them.
3Natural Ecosystems Processes
- Some Natural Ecosystem Processes which affect
humans - 1. maintenance of atmospheric quality
- 2. generation of soils
- 3. control of the water cycle
- 4. removal of wastes
- 5. energy flow
- 6. recycling of nutrients
- Humans have changed many of these ecosystem
processes --
frequently in a detrimental way.
4Human Population Growth
- The total population of humans has risen at a
rapid rate - Due to the removal of natural checks on the
population, such as disease. - The earth has finite resources
- increasing human population and consumption
places severe stress on natural processes that
renew some resources and deplete those resources
which can not be renewed.
5HUMAN POPULATION GROWTH GRAPH
6A Lesson on Overpopulation
- Kaibab national forest - Arizona - deer
- 1906 - stable population of 4,000 deer - bounty
was placed on their predators - 1906-23 deer population swells and overgrazing
begins - over 6,000 predators killed - 1924-25 of the 100,000 deer present -- over 75
die - chiefly of starvation malnutrition - 1939 - fewer than 10,000 deer remained
- Destruction of natural enemies is not always
good for a species - it can lead to its extinction or near extinction
- (Will this also happen to Homo sapiens?)
7Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- 1. Increasing numbers
- -- results from an increased human life span--
health advances largely led to this - 2. Food shortages and inadequate nutrition lead
to starvation and malnutrition - -- population growth is outpacing food
production in many world regions - starvation body lacks sufficient calories for
maintenance - malnutrition diet lacks specific substances
needed by the body
8Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- 3. Soil much loss of fertile topsoil due to
erosion and poor management - -- the use of biocides has contaminated the soil
(no prior assessment was taken of their
environmental impact) - -- some causes of topsoil loss
- - cutting forests, farming dry grasslands,
damming rivers, draining wetlands, etc. - -- much valuable farmland has been lost due to
increasing urbanization suburbanization
9Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- 4. Water
- - much waste occurs -- cutting forests has led
to increased, uncontrolled runoff - -- water pollution leaves water unfit for use
and the living things remaining in it unfit for
consumption - - (typical water pollutants include
phosphates, heavy metals, and PCB's) - biomagnification increase in the concentration
of a substance (poison) in living tissue as you
move up the food chain
10Biomagnification
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12Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- 5. Wildlife much destruction and damage has been
done to many species (hunting, fishing, etc.) - ex. passenger pigeon, dodo, great auk, bison,
carolina parakeet
13Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- 6. Fossil Fuels are becoming rapidly
depleted/add to air pollution problems - - The search and demand for additional energy
resources also impact ecosystems in a negative
way. - - Industrialization has brought an increased
demand for and use of energy. - 7. Nuclear fuels --- environmental dangers exist
in reference to obtaining, using, and storing the
wastes from these fuels
14Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- 8. Air becoming increasingly polluted
- a.) Greenhouse effect
- - adding carbon dioxide to the earth's
atmosphere may be increasing its temperature - - holds in the earth's heat radiation
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16Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- b.) Acid Rain
- -- sulfur dioxide (also nitrogen oxides) from
coal burning sources rain ACID RAIN - -- Acid rain kills aquatic life, crumbles
buildings, and has many other effects, etc.
17Map Showing the relative pH of U.S. Acid
Precipitation in 1998 (below)
18Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- c.) Ozone Depletion
- -- CFC pollution from refrigerants and plastics
are destroying our stratospheric ozone layer - - this layer shields us from incoming
ultraviolet radiation - - increased skin cancers and cataracts are
resulting from this destruction
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22Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- 9. Living space/available land is greatly
decreasing as a result of increasing population - -- creates increasing stress on individual
humans - -- we are also taking up living space and
resources needed by other organisms - 10. Forests are becoming increasingly depleted
as a result of timber needs the need for more
agricultural land - -- the direct harvesting of timber has destroyed
many forests - -- this destruction also impacts land use and
atmospheric quality
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25Specific Human Influences on Ecosystem Factors
- 11. Affluent human lifestyles have led to waste
disposal problems. (solid, chemical, nuclear) - 12. Insects our chief competitors for food
- -- we have destroyed many beneficialinsects and
many enemies of harmful insects with insecticides
- 13. Land use (includes increasing urbanization
and the cultivation of marginal lands) - -- this decreases the space and resources
available to other species - 14. Pollution -- this changes the chemical
composition of the soil, air, and water
26Factors Which Influence Environmental Quality
- 1. Population growth and distribution
- 2. Capacity of technology to solve problems
- 3. Economic, political, ethical, and cultural
views
27Factors Which Influence Environmental Quality
- Some examples
- a.) Wealthy people in the developed world tend
to have fewer children. - b.) Some countries like China have laws
concerning the number of children a couple may
have without penalty. - c.) In some countries such as many in Latin
America where the Catholic Church is a dominant
institution, families tend to be larger as birth
control violates church law. - d.) In some poor cultures in third world
countries, having many children is seen as a
means of having economic security in old age.
28How to deal with environmental degradation?
- a.) Species Preservation
- -- efforts to sustain endangered species
- - habitat protection (wildlife refuges,
national parks) - - wildlife management (game laws and
fisheries) - -- Animals which were once endangered but are
presently successfully reproducing and increasing
their numbers are the bisons, gray wolves and
egrets. - -- Endangered animals which are currently
responding to conservation efforts and beginning
to make a comeback are the whooping crane, bald
eagle, and peregrine falcon. - The future of many species remains in doubt.
- Human activities that degrade ecosystems result
in a loss of diversity in the living and
nonliving environment. These activities are
threatening current global stability.
29How to deal with environmental degradation?
- b.) Ways to Reduce Air Pollution
- 1. Use fuels which contain less pollutant, such
as low sulfur coal and oil.2. Utilize industrial
or energy producing processes which minimize the
creation of pollutants.3. Remove pollutants by
using such devices as afterburners or catalytic
converters before they enter the air.4. Design
new products which meet basic needs without
generating pollution. - There are laws which regulate and guide the
use of natural habitats.
30How to deal with environmental degradation?
- c.) SEQR A New York State law designed to
provide the opportunity for citizen review and
comment of the environmental impact of any
proposed development that has been determined to
have significant impact on the environment.
31Individual and Societal Choices that Contribute
to Improving the Environment
- 1. Through a greater awareness and application
of ecological principles, each individual can
help to assure that there will be suitable
environments for succeeding generations on our
planet. - 2. Individuals in society must decide on
proposals which involve the introduction of new
technologies. These decisions must assess
environmental risks, costs, benefits, and
trade-offs.