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Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T' Wright

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How they sustain human life and economies. Positive and negative ... Shrimp aquaculture. Coastal development. Public and Private Lands in the United States ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T' Wright


1
Environmental Science Toward a Sustainable
Future Richard T. Wright
Chapter 11
  • Ecosystem Capital Use and Restoration
  • PPT by Clark E. Adams

2
Ecosystem Capital Use and Restoration
  • Global perspective on biological systems
  • Conservation, preservation, restoration
  • Biomes and ecosystems under pressure
  • Public and private lands in the United States

3
What We Need to Know about Ecosystems
  • How they sustain human life and economies
  • Positive and negative effects of ecosystem
    conversions
  • Sustainable approaches to ecosystem management

4
(No Transcript)
5
Natural Ecosystems on Earths Surface Table 11-1
  • Total land area 57.6 million square miles
  • Total ocean area 172.6 million square miles
    mostly open ocean

6
Wetland Services
  • Valued at 100,000 per acre per year
  • Water purification and fish propagation

7
Renewable Resources
  • An ecosystems natural capacity to regenerate
  • It has the capacity to replenish despite certain
    quantities of organisms being taken from it

8
Conservation versus Preservation
  • Conservation managing or regulating use so that
    it does not exceed the capacity of the species or
    system to renew itself
  • Preservation ensure species or ecosystem
    continuity regardless of their potential utility

9
Patterns of Use of Natural Ecosystems
10
Tragedy of the Commons
  • Begins with unregulated access to a resource
    owned by no one.
  • Harvest based on largest amount over the shortest
    period of time.
  • No thought given to sustainable harvests.
  • Usually ends with no resource for anyone.

11
Preventing a Tragedy of the Commons
  • Private ownership
  • Regulated access
  • Sustained benefits
  • Fairness in access rights
  • Common consent of the regulated

12
Principles Incorporated into Public Policies to
Protect Natural Resources (Table 11-2)
  • Natural resources cannot be treated as an open
    commons.
  • Sound science needed to assess health and level
    of resource use.
  • Precautionary principle should be used in setting
    limits for exploitation.

13
Principles Incorporated into Public Policies to
Protect Natural Resources (Table 11-2)
  • Regulations should be enforced.
  • Economic incentives that encourage the violation
    of regulations should be eliminated.
  • Subsidies that support exploitation should be
    removed.

14
Principles Incorporated into Public Policies to
Protect Natural Resources (Table 11-2)
  • Suitable habitats for the resource should be
    preserved and protected from pollution.
  • The sustenance needs of people living close to
    the resource should be met.

15
Restoration
  • The intent of ecosystem restoration is to repair
    the damage to specific land and waters so that
    normal ecosystem integrity, resilience, and
    productivity returns.

16
Everglades
  • The largest restoration project ever conceived
  • The Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan
    (CERP)

17
Biomes and Ecosystems under Pressure
  • Forest biomes
  • Ocean ecosystems
  • Coral reefs and mangroves

18
Forest Biomes
  • Conserve biodiversity
  • Moderate regional climates
  • Prevent erosion
  • Store carbon and nutrients
  • Provide recreational opportunities
  • Provide a number of vital goods

19
World Forest Biomes
20
Causes of Deforestation
  • Conversion into pastures and agricultural lands

21
Silviculture Forest Management with Harvest Goals
  • Even-aged management
  • Clear-cutting no tree left behind
  • Uneven-aged management
  • Selective cutting

22
Causes of the Loss of Tropical Rain Forests
  • Colonization consolidation of agricultural lands
  • Huge national debts

23
Conserving Tropical Rain Forests
  • Ecotourism
  • Extractive reserves
  • Management by indigenous people
  • Rubber plantations
  • Sustainable logging

24
Sustainable Forest Management
  • Manage for sustainable outcomes
  • Teach others
  • Protect the health of the forest
  • Recognize and protect unique forest ecosystems
  • Strive to be better forest managers

25
Mangroves
  • Protects coasts from storm damage and erosion
  • Forms rich refuge and nursery for marine fish

26
Coral Reefs
  • Important food sources for local people
  • Wave erosion control
  • Great diversity of marine vertebrates and
    invertebrates

27
Sources of Damage to Coral Reefs
  • Warm water
  • Eutrophication
  • Islander poverty
  • Logging
  • Shrimp aquaculture
  • Coastal development

28
Public and Private Lands in the United States
  • National parks and national wildlife refuges
  • National forests
  • Protecting nonfederal lands
  • Conclusion

29
Federal Lands (40) in the U.S.
30
The Greater Yellowstone Coalition
31
Wilderness Act of 1964
  • Provides for permanent protection of undeveloped
    and unexploited areas so that natural ecological
    processes can operate freely
  • 4 of land area in U.S.
  • Preservation, not conservation

32
National Forests
  • Only 5 of the original U.S. forests are left
  • Most U.S. forests are second growth

http//www.fs.fed.us/r5/lassen/fire/gallery/
33
Environmental Concerns
Reagan
Clinton
Post WW II Housing Boom
34
New Forestry Ecosystem Management
  • Cut trees less frequently
  • Leave wider buffer zones along waterways
  • Leave dead logs and debris
  • Protect broader landscapes
  • Build no new roads until damage to old ones is
    addressed

35
Protecting Nonfederal Lands
  • Land Trust Alliance
  • Nature Conservancy
  • Trustees of Reservations in Massachusetts

36
Conclusions?
  • We are plundering our childrens heritage to pay
    for our present unsustainable practices.
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