Title: CHAPTER 6 HUMANS IN THE BIOSPHERE
1CHAPTER 6HUMANS IN THE BIOSPHERE
2SECTION 1 A CHANGING LANDSCAPE
3Key Concept Question
- What types of human activities can affect the
biosphere?
4- What is carrying capacity?
- the largest number of individuals that an
environment can support - What do you think would be the
- consequences of exceeding Earths
- carrying capacity?
- overcrowding, shortage of food and water,
shortage of fuel, malnutrition, increased disease
5Humans and the Environment
- Humans now live in almost every kind of ecosystem
on Earth. - As human population increases, the impact of
humans on the environment increases. - Humans are a part of the environment and can
affect the resilience of the environment. The
more that the human population grows, the more
resources from the environment we will need to
survive.
6- Earth is an interconnected planet we depend on
the environment, and the environment is affected
by our actions. - Learning about this connectedness helps us care
for the environment and ensures that the
environment will continue to support us and other
species on Earth.
7Visual Concept Human Population
8What types of human activities can affect the
biosphere?
- hunting and gathering
- agriculture
- industry
- urban development
9According to a recent study, human activity uses
as much energy as all of Earths other
multicellular species
10- Lets think about how humans have changed
throughout history.
11MONOCULTURE
- large fields were cleared, plowed, and planted
with a single crop year-after-year. - needed irrigation
- chemical fertilizers
- pesticides needed
- human and animal power replaced by machines
12What are the advantages of using agricultural
machines such as tractors and harvesting combines?
- Vast acreages can be plowed, sown, and harvested
in less time and with fewer people enabling
farmers to produce large crops
13What are the disadvantages?
- initial cost, and cost of repairs and maintenance
- increased energy resources are used
- release of exhaust gas into the air
- noise pollution
14Results of the Industrial Revolution during 1800s
- reliance on fossil fuels
- increased use of mineral resources
- large-scale production of manufactured goods
15Suburban sprawl
- The spread of suburban communities across America
16- Problems
- large amounts of waste that needs to be disposed
of - consumes farmland
- consumes natural habitats
- places stress on native plants and animals
17Key Concept Question
- What types of human activities can affect the
biosphere? - hunting and gathering
- agriculture
- industry
- urban development
18SECTION 2 RENEWABLE AND NONRENEWABLE RESOURCES
19Key Concept Questions
- How are environmental resources classified?
- What effects do human activities have on natural
resources
20Resources
- Earths resources are described as renewable or
nonrenewable. - Renewable resources are natural resources that
can be replaced at the same rate at which they
are consumed. - A renewable resources supply is either so large
or so constantly renewed that it will never be
used up.
21- RENEWABLE RESOURCES
- Trees
- Water
- Air
22- Nonrenewable resources are resources that form at
a rate that is much slower than the rate at which
they are consumed. - Most of our energy today comes from fossil fuels.
- Fossil fuels are nonrenewable energy resources
that formed from the remains of organisms that
lived long ago.
23- Fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas,
are nonrenewable resources because it takes
millions of years for them to form. - We use fossil fuels at a rate that is faster than
the rate at which they form. So, when these
resources are gone, millions of years will pass
before more have formed.
24How can people be sure that renewable resources
will be available for future generations?
25SUSTAINABLE USE
- a way of using natural resources at a rate that
does not deplete them - use of biological pest control instead of
pesticides - rotating animal grazing grounds
- planting trees after others have been cut down
26Sustainable development manages resources for
present and future generations.
- Sustainable development meets needs without
hurting future generations. - resources meet current needs
- resources will still be available for future use
27- The timber industry has started to adopt
sustainable practices. - Global fisheries have adopted several sustainable
practices. - rotation of catches
- fishing gear review
- harvest reduction
- fishing bans
28What effect do human activities have on natural
resources?
- Human activities affect the supply and the
quality of renewable resources
29Land Resources
- space for cities and industry
- supplies raw materials
- soil for crops
30Soil Damage
- Fertile soil allows agriculture to supply the
world with food. - Fertile soil forms from rock that is broken down
by weathering. - Nutrients that make soil fertile come from the
weathered rock as well as from bacteria, fungi
and the remains of plants and animals. - The processes that form just a few centimeters of
fertile soil can take thousands of years.
31- The greatest threat to soil is soil erosion.
- Erosion is a process in which the materials of
Earths surface are worn away by wind, gravity,
or water.
32DESERTIFICATION
- In certain parts of the world with dry climates,
a combination of farming, overgrazing, and
drought has turned once productive areas into
deserts
33- Sustainable agricultural practices can prevent
erosion
34Terracing
35Crop Rotation
36Cover Crop
37Contour Plowing
38Ecosystem Disruption
- Ecosystem disruptions can result in loss of
biodiversity, food supplies, potential cures for
diseases, and the balance of ecosystems that
supports all life on Earth. - We cannot avoid disrupting ecosystems as we try
to meet the needs of a growing human population. - We can learn about how our actions affect the
environment so that we can create ways to
conserve it.
39- Over the last 50 years, about half of the worlds
tropical rain forests have been cut down or
burned for timber, pastureland, or farmland. This
process of clearing forests is called
deforestation. - The problem with deforestation is that as the
rain forests and other habitats disappear, so do
their inhabitants. - Habitat destruction and damage cause more
extinction and loss of biodiversity than any
other human activities do.
40- How We Can Help
- replant trees
- new tree varieties are being created to grow
faster
41Ocean Resources
- food
- Problem
- over fishing stresses ecosystems
- How We Can Help
- limits on numbers of fish caught
42- AQUACULTURE
- Farming of aquatic ecosystems
43Air Resources
- Fossil fuel emissions affect the biosphere.
44Pollutants accumulate in the air.
- Pollution is any undesirable factor added to the
air, water, or soil. - Smog is one type of air pollution.
- sunlight interacts with pollutants in the air
- pollutants produced by fossil fuel emissions
- made of particulates and ground-level ozone
- microscopic particles of ash and dust that can
enter the nose, mouth, and lungs, causing health
problems over a long term
45- Smog can be harmful to human health.
- Acid rain is caused by fossil fuel emissions.
- produced when pollutants in the water cycle cause
rain pH to drop - can lower the pH of a lake or stream
- can harm trees
46- McDougall video Air Pollution
47- How We Can Help
- strict automobile emission standards
- technology to reduce emissions from smokestacks
of factories
48- Water Resources
- drinking
- washing
- watering crops
49Water pollution affects ecosystems.
- Pollution can put entire freshwater ecosystems at
risk.
50Water Pollution
- Water pollution can come from fertilizers and
pesticides used in agriculture, livestock farms,
industrial waste, oil runoff from roads, septic
tanks, and unlined landfills. - Pollution enters groundwater when polluted
surface water percolates down through the soil. - Landfills and leaking underground septic tanks
are also major sources of groundwater pollution.
51- When pollutants run off land and into rivers,
both aquatic habitats and public water sources
may be contaminated. - Fertilizers from farms, lawns, and golf courses
can run off into a body of water, which increases
the amount of nutrients in the water leading to
an excessive growth of algae. - Algal blooms can deplete the dissolved oxygen in
a body of water. Fish and other organisms then
suffocate in the oxygen-depleted water.
52Water Pollution
53- How We Can Help
- protect wetlands such as swamps they help
purify through the water cycle - conserve use
- cleaning water sewage treatment plants
54Key Concept Questions
- How are environmental resources classified?
- Renewable or nonrenewable
- What effects do human activities have on natural
resources? - Human activities affect the supply and the
quality of renewable resources
55SECTION 3 BIODIVERSITY
56Key Concept Questions
- What is the value of biodiversity?
- What are the current threats to biodiversity?
- What is the goal of conservation biology?
57BIODIVERSITY
- Is the sum total of the genetically based variety
of all organisms in the biosphere
58Biodiversity
59Species Diversity
60Preserving biodiversity is important to the
future of the biosphere.
- The loss of biodiversity has long-term effects.
- loss of medical and technological advances
- extinction of species
- loss of ecosystem stability
61- Ecosystem disruption decreases the number of
Earths species. - Biodiversity affects the stability of ecosystems
and the sustainability of populations. - Every species plays an important role in the
cycling of energy and nutrients in an ecosystem.
Each species either depends on or is depended on
by at least one other species.
62- Indicator species provide a sign of an
ecosystems health. - Amphibians
- top predators
63- EXTINCTION
- occurs when a species disappears from all or part
of its range - ENDANGERED SPECIES
- a species whose population size is declining in a
way that places it in danger of extinction
This baby Slender Loris is a member of the shy,
nocturnal primate species
64- As the population of an endangered species
declines, the species loses genetic diversity-an
effect that can make it even more vulnerable to
extinction - Once a species becomes extinct, will it ever
reappear? - NO
65Loss of habitat eliminates species.
- Habitat fragmentation prevents an organism from
accessing its entire home range. - occurs when a barrier forms within the habitat
- often caused by human development
66- Habitat corridors are a solution to the problem.
- corridors can be road overpasses or underpasses
- allow species to move between different areas of
habitat
67- Many forms of pollution can threaten
- biodiversity, but one of the most serious
- problems occurs when toxic compounds
- accumulate or build up in the tissues of
- organisms
- Ex) DDT cheap pesticide, long acting, and
worked very well - Problems nonbiodegradeable and not eliminated
from animals bodies
68- One effect of DDT on eagles was to make their
eggs too fragile to survive intact
69DDT
70BIOLOGICAL MAGNIFICATION (Biomagnification)(Bioa
ccumulation)
- concentrations of a harmful substance increase in
organisms at higher trophic levels in a food
chain or food web
71Biomagnification causes accumulation of toxins in
the food chain.
- Pollutants can move up the food chain.
- predators eat contaminated prey
- pollution accumulates at each stage of the food
chain - Top consumers, including humans, are most
affected.
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73- Which food level is at the highest risk for
- biological magnification?
- Top-level carnivores
74Bioaccumulation
75Introduced species can disrupt stable
relationships in an ecosystem.
- An introduced species is one that is brought to
an ecosystem by humans. - accidental
- purposeful
- Invasive species can have an environmentaland
economic impact.
76Invasive Species
77Zebra Mussel Purple Loostrife
78- Invasive species often push out native species.
- Burmese python (Florida Everglades)
79 80- kudzu (southeastern United States)
81Conservation practices focus on a few species but
benefit entire ecosystems.
- The Endangered Species Act works to protect
individual species from extinction. - A listed species is often called an umbrella
species. - the habitat in which the species lives must be
protected - other species are protected because they share
the ecosystem
82Protecting Earths resources helps protect our
future.
- The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was
created in 1970. - The EPA develops policies and regulations to
protect the environment. - Legislation helps to protect the environment and
endangered species. - Clean Air Act
- Clean Water Act
- Endangered Species Act
83- The National Park Service helps manage public
lands. - The park system includes over 390 areas, covering
84 million acres.
84- There are several ways that people can help
protect the environment. - control population growth
- develop sustainable technology and practices
- protect and maintain ecosystems
85Visual Concept Conservation
86Key Concept Questions
- What is the value of biodiversity?
- Species of many kinds have provided us with
- Foods
- industrial products
- Medicines
- Painkillers
- Antibiotics
- heart drugs
- Antidepressants
- anticancer drugs
87Key Concept Questions
- What are the current threats to biodiversity?
- Habitat fragmentation
- invasive species
- endangered species
- What is the goal of conservation?
- protecting existing natural habitats.
88SECTION 4 CHARTING A COURSE FOR THE FUTURE
89Key Concept Question
- What are two types of global change of concern to
biologists?
90- WHAT ARE TWO TYPES OF GLOBAL
- CHANGE OF CONCERN TO BIOLOGISTS?
- The thinning, or depletion, of the ozone layer
- Global warming
- Oxygen O2
- Ozone O3
91- OZONE LAYER
- between 20 and 50 kilometers above the Earths
surface, the atmosphere contains a concentration
of ozone gas - Absorbs UV radiation before sunlight hits Earth
92Visual Concept Ozone and Ecosystems
93Ozone Hole Over Antarctica
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95What happens if a person receives too much sun?
- Sunburn
- Cancer
- Damage eyes
- Decrease disease resistance
- Too much UV radiation can have a harmful
- effect on plants and phytoplankton in the
- oceans
96What is the cause of the holes in the ozone layer?
- CFCs chlorofluorocarbons they were chemicals
used in aerosol cans as the propellant, coolant
in refrigerators, freezers, and air conditioners
97- What would happen to the temperature of
- the atmosphere if the amount of
- greenhouse gases increased?
- The atmosphere would become warmer global
warming
98- The greenhouse effect slows the release of energy
from Earths atmosphere. - sunlight penetrates Earths atmosphere
- energy is absorbed and reradiated as heat
- greenhouse gases absorb longer wavelengths
- Greenhouse gas molecules rereleaseinfrared
radiation
99- Global warming refers to the trend of increasing
global temperatures.
North Pole
100Air pollution is changing Earths biosphere.
- The levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide rise and
fall over time. - High levels of carbon dioxide are typical of
Earths warmer periods.
101- Scientists around the world are trying to make
models of the effect of increasing global
temperatures to predict what the future will be
like
102Visual Concept Greenhouse Effect
103Visual Concept Global Warming
104Key Concept Question
- What are two types of global change of concern to
biologists? - Depletion of the ozone layer and Global Warming