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Natural Resources

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Unit 5 Natural Resources What are Resources? Resources are available material goods, or sources of wealth, that benefit and fulfill the needs of a community. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Natural Resources


1
Unit 5
  • Natural Resources

2
What are Resources?
  • Resources are available material goods, or
    sources of wealth, that benefit and fulfill the
    needs of a community.
  • There are THREE necessary conditions that must be
    met in order for naturally occurring material to
    be considered a resource

3
These three conditions are
  • 1. Need or Want
  • A culture must have a need or a want for the
    natural material itself or things requiring the
    natural material. 
  • Ex People desire gold (a natural resource)
    itself for its aesthetic value.

4
These three conditions are
  • 2. Technological Development
  • A culture must have technological capabilities
    to extract and develop the natural material. 
  • Ex the oil off the coast of NL was not a
    resource until we developed the capability to
    extract it. 

5
These three conditions are
  • 3. Profitability
  • A culture must be able to make a profit from
    the material. 
  • If the cost of extracting and producing is too
    high it is not profitable!  If there is no desire
    for the natural material it will not sell and is
    not profitable.

6
How culture affects resources
  • Example Sea Urchins
  • - Asia had the "want" as a desired food source.
    We have developed the harvesting "technology"
    because the demand was there.  It is "profitable"
    due to inexpensive technology and high demand. 
  • - Consequently all three conditions were met and
    sea urchins became a resource.

7
Topic 1The Fishery
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9
What types of species live in the Ocean?
10
Phytoplankton Microscopic, single-celled plant
organisms that live in the top layer of the ocean
waters where sunlight can shine through easily.
Zooplankton Microscopic, single-celled animal
organisms that live in the top layer of ocean
waters.
11
Identify a Food Chain Phytoplankton Zooplankton
Salmon Puffin Fox
What would happen if a species was removed?
12
Habitat The natural environment where organisms
live successfully.
  • Continental Shelf A gently
  • sloping area extending from
  • the low-water line to the depth
  • of a marked increase in slope
  • around the margin of a
  • continent.

13
  • Fishing Banks A shallow area on the continental
    shelf that provides a feeding and spawning ground
    for fish.
  • NOTE
  • Phytoplankton thrive here because the cold,
    nutrient-rich water is located at the surface
    where sunlight can easily penetrate through.

14
Fish Habitats in Canada
15
Commercial Fishing
  • Definition
  • This is fishing with the purpose of selling the
    catch.
  • Commercial fishing makes up about 0.5 of the
    total value of Canadas economy.
  • In parts of the Atlantic Coast and the Pacific
    Coast commercial fishing is the foundation of the
    economy and is the basis of a traditional way of
    life.

16
Commercial Fishing
  • Commercial fishing occurs primarily
  • in three areas
  • East Coast
  • West Coast
  • Larger, inland water bodies

17
Two Fish Habitats in Canada
  • Canadian Atlantic Coast
  • Canadian Pacific Coast
  • Each of these areas have a variety of reasons
    which make it suitable as a fish habitat

18
Atlantic Canada
19
Suitability for Fish Habitats
  • Canadian Atlantic Coast (Pg. 264)
  • It is located on a continental shelf.
  • This shelf has very shallow areas called banks.
  • These banks allow sunlight to shine through.
  • Nutrients are available, hence phytoplankton is
    present.
  • This area experiences turbulence, due to a cold
    ocean current (Labrador current) meeting with a
    warm ocean current (Gulf Stream current).
  • Also water turbulence stirs up the nutrients.

20
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21
Canadas Pacific Coast
22
Suitability for Fish Habitats
  • Canadian Pacific Coast (Pg. 268)
  • This fishery has a higher market value than those
    on the east coast.
  • Many of the rivers located in British Columbia
    flow out into the ocean where a cold and warm
    ocean current meet.
  • These rivers help add nutrients to the ocean
    waters.
  • These rivers also help Salmon migrate to the
    ocean, where they will be fished.
  • The most valuable salmon type, is called Sockeye,
    and catch is 60 times larger in this area.

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Comparing the Atlantic Fishery the Pacific
Fishery
  • Atlantic Fishery
  • Species caught (cod, herring, lobster, crab,
    flounder, mackerel, clams).
  • 179,000 people are employed.
  • This region has 80 of Canadas total landings.
  • Most value comes form lobster, crab, shrimp and
    scallop.
  • Export values are 3.4 billion.
  • The technology used includes boats, trawl nets,
    lobster pots, crab pots, gill nets, hooks and
    lines.

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27
Comparing the Atlantic Fishery the Pacific
Fishery
  • Pacific Fishery
  • Species caught (cod, salmon, herring, halibut).
  • 17,385 people are employed.
  • This region has 16 of Canadas total landing.
  • Most value comes from salmon, clams, groundfish,
    and herring roe.
  • Higher market value compared to East coast.
  • The technology used includes boats, gill nets,
    hooks and lines, draw-purse nets, beach nets,
    purse seines.

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29
Two Types of Fishery(Pg. 265)
  • Inshore Fishery
  • Boats remain within 16-20 km of shore and return
    home every day during warmer months.
  • Boats are small (5-20m in length) with fixed gear
    and independently owned and operated.
  • Boat crews consists of 1-3 people.
  • Income is low and irregular, and fisherman
    usually collect unemployment insurance in the
    offseason.
  • These fisherman are self-employed, and market and
    sell their own catch.

30
  • Offshore Fishery
  • Boats fish to edges of continental shelf, up to
    350km from shore.
  • Boats stay out to sea for 2-3 weeks or longer
    before returning home and fish all year long.
  • Boats are large (20-50m in length), with the
    latest technology and equipment (usually mobile
    fish nets).
  • Boat crews consists of 12-16 people.
  • Fisherman obtain a steady income.
  • Boats are owned and operated by large companies
    that catch, process, and market the fish.

31
Fisheries Management
  • There are a number of issues related to the
    fishery that require management.
  • Pollution and conservation of fish stocks top the
    list.

32
Major Sources of Ocean Pollution
  • Oil
  • Oceans suffer from many devastating spills.
  • Hundreds of millions of gallons of oil quietly
    end up in the seas every year, mostly from
    non-accidental sources.

33
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34
Major Sources of Ocean Pollution
  • Toxic Material
  • Industrial, agricultural, household cleaning,
    gardening, and automotive products regularly end
    up in water.
  • EX TBT, or tributyl tin, is added to boat paints
    to kill or repel barnacles and other troubling
    organisms that soil ships' hulls.

35
Major Sources of Ocean Pollution
  • Dangerous Debris
  • When trash, particularly plastics, end up in the
    sea, they pose hazards to marine life.
  • Animals drown or
  • strangle from getting
  • tangled in discarded or
  • lost fishing gear, or suffer
  • and even die from eating
  • plastics and other garbage.

36
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37
Major Sources of Ocean Pollution
  • Deposits Withdrawals
  • Humans have used oceans as vast dumps for
    domestic, municipal, and industrial garbage for
    thousands of years.
  • The enormous deep-sea resources will undoubtedly
    attract more miners in the future, as
    easy-to-reach deposits on land are depleted.

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39
Impact of New Technology on the Ocean Environment
(Pg. 206)
  • Factory freezer Trawlers
  • have likely had the most significant and
    negative impact.

40
The reasons for this include
  • Highly efficient at catching fish, but greatly
    reduces the population reproduction.
  • Large diesel engines, echo sounding equipment,
    onboard freezers, and GPS navigation contribute
    to their efficiency.
  • Destruction of the ocean
  • floor by trawls/draggers
  • eliminates good spawning
  • locations for fish. Also, it
  • disperses eggs, making
  • fertilization more difficult.

41
  • By-catch is often discarded. Some regulations
    require ships to return with low levels of by
    catch.
  • Traveling great distances and being able to stay
    at sea for long periods allows trawlers from all
    over the world to come together in good fishing
    areas. This puts added pressure on the fish
    stock.

42
Sustainable Fishery
  • Definition
  • Using a resources such as the ocean species in a
    way that will ensure they
  • will not become extinct, but
  • will be protected to increase
  • for the benefit of future generations.

43
Strategies for a Sustainable Fishery
  • Have knowledge about sustaining the fishery.
  • Human attitudes must change.
  • People need to understand the long-term wellbeing
    of the resource.
  • Decrease consumption and worlds population.
  • Extend legal jurisdictions.
  • Try to prevent foreign fishing.
  • OtherCan YOU identify any?????????????????
  • technology, catch techniques, pollution,
    aquaculture.

44
Depletion of cod stocks
  • Fish is a renewable resource, and that renewable
    resources must be managed properly.
  • Fish can be harvested forever if the number
    caught each year does not exceed the number
    reaching maturity in that year.

45
Why the collapse?
  • Five major conditions responsible for the
    collapse
  • Overfishing
  • Improved Fishing Technology
  • Uncontrolled Foreign Fishing
  • Destructive Fishing Practices
  • Changes in Natural Conditions

46
Aquaculture
  • It is also known as fish farming and involves
    the raising of marine life in a controlled
    environment. Hence, this activity breeds and
    raises fish in tanks, ponds, and reservoirs.
  • Since the fish are fed regularly and are safe
    from natural predators, they mature rapidly and
    successfully.

47
Aquaculture
  • CASE STUDY
  • Aquaculture The Future of The Fishing Industry
  • (Pg. 273-275)
  • Complete Questions

48
How do Canadians use resources in the ocean
  • Many species sold fresh to restaurants (to be
    eaten).
  • Most species like cod salmon are gutted,
    filleted and the meat is eaten.
  • Capelin are eaten whole
  • Some species like sturgeon lump fish sea
    urchins the eggs are extracted (roe or caviar).

49
How do Canadians use resources in the ocean
  • Cod, haddock Pollock are processed into fish
    sticks, fish cakes, imitation crab legs/meat.

50
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51
How do Canadians use resources in the ocean
  • Cod, haddock Pollock are processed into fish
    sticks, fish cakes, imitation crab legs/meat.
  • Some species are used in cat food
  • Cod and many others have oil extracted from them
    for medicinal purposes, vitamin minerals.
  • Bait for other species
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