Title: ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS Module Code: NG1028M
1ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMSModule Code NG1028M
- Dr Heidi Smith
- Lecture 1 part A Introduction to Systems
2Lecture outline
- What are environmental systems
- Definitions
- Characteristics
- History of the integrated approach
- Laws of matter and energy
- Types of system
- Equilibrium, feedback and thresholds
3What is the environment?
- The circumstances, objects or conditions by which
one is surrounded? - The aggregate of social and cultural conditions
that influence the life of an individual or
community this has social, political, economic
and technological dimensions? - The complex of climatic, edaphic and biotic
factors that act upon an organism or an
ecological community and ultimately determine its
form and survival?
4The natural environment?
- Physical
- Lithosphere
- Hydrosphere
- Atmosphere
- Biological
- Biosphere
- Biota - all life forms
NB Biosphere is often used to refer to what we
shall call the Ecosphere, with our biosphere
sometimes simply referred to as biota
5The ecosphere
- Includes lower atmosphere, all life (biosphere),
the oceans, soils and solid sediments that
exchange elements actively with the rest of the
ecosphere - Ecosphere is a linked system
6(No Transcript)
7What is a System?
- System is a word that we use everyday
- Transport system
- Circulatory system
- Educational system
- Heating system
- So what does a system actually mean?
8- A System is
- an assembly of parts or components connected
together in an organised way - (Bieshon, 1971, Systems. Open University)
- Systems are used by humans in every day life to
describe the operation of a number of diverse
phenomena
9A system is ...
a group of things or parts (called elements) that
work together through a regular set of relations
(called links) within defined limits (called the
system boundary)
(Haggett, 2001, Geography a global synthesis.)
- Within their defined boundaries systems contain
three types of properties elements, attributes,
and relationships - Elements are the things that make up the system
of interest - Attributes are the perceived characteristics of
the elements - Relationships are descriptions of how the various
elements (and their attributes) work together to
carry out some kind of process
10System characteristics
- White, Mottershead and Harrison (1992) - a set
of elements with a set of properties - All systems have some structure or organization
- They are all to some extent generalisations,
abstractions or idealisations of the real world - All function in some way
- There are functional and structural relationships
between the parts - Function implies that flows and transfers of
material occur - Function requires a driving force or energy
source - All systems have some degree of integration
11Deayon et al. (2000) consider a system to have
the following 4 components
- Reservoirs a repository where something is
accumulated, stored and potentially passed to
other elements of the system - Processes an ongoing activity in the system
that determines the contents of the reservoirs
over time. - Converters system variables that can play
different roles within a system. Dictate the
rates at which processes operate and therefore
the rates at which reservoir contents change - Interrelationships the intricate connections
among all components of the system, usually
expressed as simple mathematical relationships
12What is useful about systems thinking and
organization for constructing mental images of
our experience of the world?
- The need to organise experiences
- As a general method of approach to working out
how those systems work - Useful to ringfence something you want to
understand, because fences are for convenience
and are moveable - Fences can be moved at need - to hold less or
more, to see from a finer or larger scale than
before - It can be modular (can modify sections)
- It has depth (can zoom in and out)
- Connections can be built and broken as needed, or
as scale or perspective shifts and the modules
moved around ...
13An Environmental system?
- An environmental system can be defined as a
system where life interacts with abiotic factors. - All involve the capture, movement, storage, and
use of energy. - This fact also makes them energy systems.
- Energy is captured in the living components of
environmental systems - photosynthesis, biomass consumption, and biotic
decomposition. - Energy is also used in environmental processes
that are strictly abiotic - solar energy is responsible for wind, weathering,
and precipitation.
14An Environmental system?
- Systems vary in size and complexity and in the
organisational hierarchy - e.g. biosphere - biome - ecosystem - community -
population - organism - Boundaries may be flexible.
- e.g. ecosystem a forest, a single tree, the edge
of a pond, or the edges of a hectare of grassland
arbitrarily pegged out for a student project - Different levels of organisation have different
features, but what happens at one level may
affect the others - Within hierarchically structured environments,
the behaviour of one level is strongly influenced
by the behaviour of the two adjacent levels
15- Environmental SYSTEMS
- versus Environmental Science/Studies?
- A difference in emphasis
- Integrated approach, emphasis on relationships
and linkages distinguishes the systems approach
16So whats the point of studying environmental
systems?
- Supports research with the goal of applying
engineering principles to reduce adverse effects
of solid, liquid, gaseous discharges on the
land, fresh ocean waters, air that result
from human activity impair the value of those
resources. - Natural systems must be understood to support
research on innovative biological, chemical,
physical processes used alone or as components of
engineered systems to restore the usefulness of
polluted land, water, air resources.
17So whats the point of studying environmental
systems?
- Because to tackle human, environmental economic
crises we need clear understanding of complex,
delicate system of which we are all part - To demonstrate reinforce the Unity of
Science, e.g. cosmology, physics, geology,
ecology, hydrology, biology even engineering!
18- Environmental systems analysis is the application
of systems analysis in the environmental field to
describe analyse the causes, mechanisms,
effects of, potential solution for specific
environmental problems
The Earths systems (simplified!)
19Systems theory
- SYSTEMS THEORY suggests that you model natural
and human-made phenomena as a set of interrelated
components that work together to accomplish some
kind of process - (Systems analysis is a quantitative
multidisciplinary research field aimed at
combining, interpreting communicating knowledge
from natural social sciences, technology) - First to find laws of complex systems
- Rapid boom - 1940s
- Treats complex systems as black box with
- inputs and outputs
- feedback processes (that counteract
perturbations) - CRITICISMS
- too general
- too vague it omits many of the details as to
how a system operates
20Or.Chaos theory?
- More mathematical, rigorous
- 1960s - Edward Lorenz
- Chaotic system sensitive to slightest change
- Amplified via positive feedback
- E.g. the weather
- Simple systems, e.g. several atoms, often have
chaotic properties so predicting their future
behaviour is almost impossible - Chaos allows patterns of regularity to be
discerned and studied
butterfly effect
21Environmental systems theory
- Often think about systems in isolated fashion.
However, most systems have hierarchical
connections and structure. - connections can be to structures that exist at
smaller or larger scales. - Reductionist (scientific) approach complex
problems deconstructed - treats each part of Earth as separate, as if it
exists alone - studies finer and finer detail
- Ecology HAS ALWAYS emphasised the holistic study
of parts and the whole but was considered poor
relation - now realisation of the EMERGENT PROPERTY (Salt,
1979) of an ecological unit - that which cannot
be predicted from the study of decoupled
components - Environmental systems thinking provides way to
reconcile dichotomies between analysis and
synthesis, between reductionism and holism
22A systems approach to the environment (or to
any natural or social science) is undeniably an
attitude of mindAND SO OF COURSEthere are
critics of what they consider to be this
philosophy of science
23History of Earth systems thinking
- James Hutton the rock cycle
- 200 years ago
- Connection between Earth surface and interior is
an eternal cycle of sedimentation, burial,
deformation and plutonism, uplift and weathering - Huttons rock cycle underlies concept of cycling
of elements and compounds through different
reservoirs at surface and in the interior of Earth
24James Hutton and the Rock cycle
Rocks are weathered to sediment, then after deep
burial they undergo metamorphosis or melting or
both. Later they are deformed and uplifted to
mountains, only to be weathered again and recycled
25Geologic cycle collective processes responsible
for the formation and destruction of Earth
materials A group of subcycles rock cycle,
tectonic cycle, hydrological cycle,
biogeochemical cycles
26THE LAWS OF THERMODYNAMICS
Thermodynamics literally the study of heat as
it does work Energetics may be a better term
?
27Thermodynamic (or energy) systems
- A defined system of matter, the energy content
of that system of matter, and the exchange of
energy between that system and its surroundings - That part of the physical universe whose
properties are under investigation.
28MATTER AND ENERGY LAWS
- A) Law of conservation of matter
-
- B) First law of energy (first law of
thermodynamics) -
- C) Second law of energy (second law of
thermodynamics)
29LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MATTER
- matter is neither created nor destroyed but
merely changed from one form to another
Changes of state involve a redistribution of
energy between the particles of matter that
compose the system or between the system and its
surroundings. Involves both transfers and
transformations of energy.
30FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS(LAW OF CONSERVATION
OF ENERGY)
- Applies in living systems as it does in inanimate
ones - Energy may be transformed from one form to
another, but cannot be created or destroyed - The total energy of the universe remains constant
- It is the flow or cascade of energy that helps to
maintain the integrity of systems - However, any conversion is less than 100
efficient and, inevitably, some energy is lost or
wasted, usually in the form of heat at each
transfer and at the end, there is little energy
left - E.g. food chains rarely have more than 4 or 5
links
31- Energy cannot be re-circulated within a system
indefinitely! - Unless it is replenished and energy continues to
cascade through, the system breaks down, becomes
disordered and matter and energy change from
concentrated forms to more dispersed forms. -
32THE SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS
- Is concerned with the direction of naturally
occurring, or real, processes. These are
irreversible, they proceed with an increase in
disorder of matter and energy. - In an isolated system, entropy tends to increase
spontaneously
En in trope transformation
33Entropy
Entropy is the measure of the disorder of the
system, but it can never be absolutely
quantified All physical and chemical processes
proceed towards maximum entropy. At this point
here is thermodynamic equilibrium.
- Principles were developed to apply to closed
systems - Open systems do not attain thermodynamic
equilibrium of maximum entropy, but are
maintained in a dynamic steady state by
throughput of energy and matter
34- Life is a battle against entropy, and without the
constant replenishment of energy, it cannot exist
35- Living systems and the whole biosphere are what
Ilya Prigogine has called far-from-equilibrium
systems that have efficient dissipative
structures to pump out the disorder - Living systems seemingly defy the second law of
thermodynamics by self-organisation to maintain
an open, far-from-equilibrium state. -
- Entropy, it turns out, is not at all negative as
the quantity of energy declines in successive
transfers, the quality of the remainder may be
greatly enhanced - Prigogine won the Nobel Prize for his work on
non-equilibrium thermodynamics
36First two laws of thermodynamics First law
illustrated by conversion of sun energy (A) to
food (sugar, C) by photosynthesis. Second law
dictates that C is always less than A because of
heat dissipation during conversion
37An impossible ecosystem!
Laws of thermodynamics tell us that such a
biological perpetual motion machine cannot exist
38Maximum power principle
H.T.Odum
- Natural and human-made systems need
- continuous input of high quality energy
- storage capacity
- the means to dissipate entropy
- Systems most likely to survive efficiently
transform the most energy into useful work for
themselves and the surrounding systems with which
they are linked for mutual benefit
39Whilst on the subject
another (related fundamental) law
- The first law of ECOLOGY
- Or law of unintended consequences
- We can never do merely one thing!
40Classification of system types
- isolated systems
- closed systems
- open systems
- morphological systems
- cascading systems - where output from one
subsystem input to next - process-response systems
- control systems
- ecosystems - a community of organisms in its
abiotic environment, together with the
relationships amongst these components
41Open, closed and isolated systems.
- Isolated system
- one that exchanges neither matter nor energy with
its environment - This cannot exist naturally (with the possible
exception being the whole universe as a system).
42Isolated system
- A cave ecosystem may receive no light from the
outside world, the organisms in it feeding and
living off each other, recycling the small amount
of energy, may be thought of as an isolated
system, but is not truly so - Bats may bring organic matter in from outside,
percolating water may bring materials in solution
or suspension or carry in small animals - Heat enters through the surrounding rocks. Even
thousands of metres below the surface of the
Earth, such a system is not isolated - Nevertheless, it can be useful to hypothesise
about a theoretical isolated system
43Open, closed and isolated systems.
- Closed system
- one in which energy is transferred between a
system and its environment, but not matter.
44Closed system
- This is fairly rare in natural systems but the
Earth as a whole might come close to it. - Some matter arrives in the form of meteorites,
and there may be some small loss of material from
the upper atmosphere, or spacecraft - Large amounts of energy come in from the sun,
however, and leave in the form of long-wave
radiated heat
45Earth is open to energy, but is essentially
closed to matter, which cycles over and through
the 4 spheres
46Open, closed and isolated systems.
- Open system
- one that exchanges matter and energy across its
boundary with its environment (almost all
ecosystems are open systems)
47Model of an ecosystem as an open, thermodynamic
non-equilibrium system. The external environment
must be considered an integral part of the
ecosystem concept.
48Note classification of an environmental system
depends upon scale (i.e., how the systems
boundaries are defined)
- river basin system (open)
- global hydrological system (closed)
49Equilibrium
- Many natural systems exist in a state of balance,
known as equilibrium or homeostasis. - Equilibrium can be defined as the average state
of a system as measured through one of its
attributes or elements over a specific period of
time
50- Static Equilibrium
- forces and reaction remain in balance, so that no
resultant force exists, and the properties of the
system remain constant through time
- Stable Equilibrium
- the system displays tendencies to return to the
same equilibrium after disturbance
51- Steady state equilibrium
- Most systems maintain this through the operation
of positive and negative feedback mechanisms - SYSTEM OSCILLATES AROUND STABLE AVERAGE VALUE
- Dynamic equilibrium
- Common in open systems, although there is
continual input and output of matter and energy
(throughflow), the state of the system remains
constant. - E.g. Biological populations - actual individuals
making up that population will be forever
changing. - SYSTEM OSCILLATES AROUND AN AVERAGE VALUE
TRENDING CONTINUOUSLY THROUGH TIME
52Meta-stable equilibrium equilibriumthe system
oscillates around an average value but sudden
discontinuities knock system out of equilibrium
so that it then oscillates around a new average
value
Unstable equilibrium the system returns to a new
equilibrium after disturbance
53Feedback
- Concept of feedback is very important in the
understanding of dynamic equilibrium - Feedback is the return of some output of a system
(or subsystem) input, or where input is affected
by present or previous output. - i.e. some kind of 'closed loop' situation exists.
- Through feedback, many systems continually
receive information from their environments,
which helps them to adjust. - A system capable of adjustment in this way is
said to be self-regulating, e.g. a thermostat - In reality the regulation of natural systems
states involves the linking of several feedback
mechanisms, some positive and some negative
feedback loops
54Feedback Response system
55The feedback loop including predator and prey
organisms
56Negative feedback
- Negative-feedback mechanisms control the state of
the system by dampening or reducing the size of
the system's elements or attributes,
counteracting any deviation from the equilibrium
level e.g. a thermostat - leads to homeostasis (self-regulation)
57Positive feedback
- Feed or increase the size of one or more of the
system's elements or attributes over time,
amplifying deviation from the equilibrium. - Occasionally a change causes another change in a
system, which possibly at several removes,
accentuates the original change. - In everyday life when a sequence like this occurs
we refer to a 'vicious circle'. - Where positive feedback is cumulative it can lead
to increase in order and complexity (i.e. growth
and development) or may lead to a retrogressive
and irreversible change in state!
58Thresholds
- State variables which, when they assume certain
values, are capable of initiating sudden and
sometimes dramatic changes of state - Thresholds can be extrinsic (externally
triggered) and intrinsic (triggered internally) - Many thresholds exist only in extreme cases in
all feedback processes state variables play a
similar role in controlling operation of
processes i.e. regulators
59Complexity and stability
- Most natural systems are very complex
- many energy and material flow paths and numerous
feedback links, maintaining the integrity of the
system, and its equilibrium - Complexity and stability are closely linked
- the more complex a system is, the more energy
paths and feedback links there are - A system with a multitude of links can withstand
stress or change better than one with only a few
components, as, if one set links or feedback
loops is disturbed, there are others that can
take over - Implication for monocultures
60Flows and Storages
- The flow of energy through a system is tightly
connected with the flow of matter - Butwhile energy is continuously flowing through
systems, matter tends to circulate around them - e.g. Photosynthesis not only fixes the sun's
energy but also fixes C from CO2 and
carbohydrates. While the energy fixed in
photosynthesis and passed on to animals is
eventually released as heat and radiated out into
space, the C will pass through several organisms
before reaching the atmosphere from whence it
will be extracted by photosynthesising plants
again. There is a circulation or cycling of C
from one storage (stock or store) to another.
61Flows and Storage
- Similarly, N is fixed from the atmosphere and
passed from one storage to another (plants,
animals, decomposing organic matter, soils,
atmosphere) in a broadly similar way
Circulation of N in the ecosystem. Such a
circulation is known as a biogeochemical cycle
62Summary of the elements and concepts that are
important about systems and common to all systems
- Systems have arbitrary boundaries, which we
define at our convenience. - Systems have inputs and outputs. No such thing as
a closed system in reality. - Within their boundaries, systems consists of
components linked by some sort of function,
transfer, or interaction (but within the
definition of the system, the currency is
uniform). - Systems are nested hierarchies (systems within
systems within systems, or systems beyond systems
beyond systems). - Any system can be exploded into more detailed
subsystems. Any system can be considered a
subsystem of a larger system.