Title: Human Impact on the Biosphere
1Human Impact on the Biosphere
2Human Impacts
- Humans are using energy and altering the
environment at astonishing rates - We are altering natural processes before we even
understand them
3Developing vs. Developed
- In developing countries, per capita resource use
is high but growing, as is population size - In developed countries, population growth has
slowed but per capita resource use is already high
4Pollutants
- Substances with which an ecosystem has had no
prior evolutionary experience - No adaptive mechanisms are in place to deal with
them
5Air Pollutants
- Carbon oxides
- Sulfur oxides
- Nitrogen oxides
- Volatile organic compounds
- Photochemical oxidants
- Suspended particles
6Chemistry 101
- Acid anhydrides oxides of nonmetals
- CO2, NO2 and SO3
- These react with water to form oxyacids.
- CO2 H2O ---gt H2CO3 (carbonic acid)
- HNO3 and H2SO4 are also formed in
- the atmosphere
7Acid Rain and Architecture
- On campus we have some architectural damage
attributable to acid rain. - The limestone lentils and pillars on the older
building are dissolving away! - H2SO4(aq) CaCO3(s) ? H2O(l)
CO2(g) CaSO4(aq)
8Industrial Smog
- Gray-air smog
- Forms over cities that burn large amounts of coal
and heavy fuel oils mainly in developing
countries - Main components are sulfur oxides and suspended
particles
9Photochemical smog
- Brown-air smog
- Forms when sunlight interacts with components
from automobile exhaust - Nitrogen oxides are the main culprits
- Hot days contribute to formation
10Thermal Inversion
- Weather pattern in which a layer of cool, dense
air is trapped beneath a layer of warm air
cool air
warm inversion air
cool air
11Cities Are Often Plagued with Thermal Inversions
12Acid Deposition
- Caused by the release of sulfur and nitrogen
oxides - Coal-burning power plants and motor vehicles are
major sources
13Effect of Ozone Thinning
- Increased amount of UV radiation reaches Earths
surface - UV damages DNA and negatively affects human
health - UV also affects plants, lowers primary
productivity
14Ozone Thinning
- In early spring and summer ozone layer over
Antarctica thins - Seasonal loss of ozone is at highest level ever
recorded
15Ozone in Earths Atmoshere
16Ozone Concentration from 1962 to 1996
http//www.igf.edu.pl/igf/atmosphere.htm
17Recipe for Ozone Loss
- The polar winter leads to the formation of the
polar vortex which isolates the air within it. - Cold temperatures form inside the vortex cold
enough for the formation of Polar Stratospheric
Clouds (PSCs). As the vortex air is isolated, the
cold temperatures and the PSCs persist. - Once the PSCs form, heterogeneous reactions take
place and convert the inactive chlorine and
bromine reservoirs to more active forms of
chlorine and bromine. - No ozone loss occurs until sunlight returns to
the air inside the polar vortex and allows the
production of active chlorine and initiates the
catalytic ozone destruction cycles. Ozone loss is
rapid. The ozone hole currently covers a
geographic region a little bigger than Antarctica
and extends nearly 10km in altitude in the lower
stratosphere
http//www.atm.ch.cam.ac.uk/tour/part3.html
18Protecting the Ozone Layer
- CFC production has been halted in developed
countries, will be phased out in developing
countries - Methyl bromide will be phased out
- Even with bans it will take more than 50 years
for ozone levels to recover
19Generating Garbage
- Developed countries generate huge amounts of
waste - Paper products account for half the total volume
- Recycling can reduce pollutants, save energy,
ease pressure on landfills
20Garbage Barge Solution
21Landfills
22Land Use
- Almost 21 percent of Earths land is used for
agriculture or grazing - About half the Earths land is unsuitable for
such uses - Remainder could be used, but at a high ecological
cost
23Green Revolutions
- Improvements in crop production
- Introduction of mechanized agriculture and
practices requires inputs of pesticides,
fertilizer, fossil fuel - Improving genetic character of crop plants can
also improve yields
24Data From the UN
25INDIA REACHING 1 BILLION ON AUGUST 15 NO
CELEBRATION PLANNEDLester R. Brown and Brian
Halweil
- Falling water tables are now also threatening
India's food production. - The International Water Management Institute
(IWMI) estimates that withdrawals of underground
water are double the rate of aquifer recharge. - As a result, water tables are falling almost
everywhere.
http//www.worldwatch.org/node/1656
26Aquifer Depletion
http//www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/EarthSC202Notes/Grndh2o
.htm
27Deforestation
- Removal of all trees from large tracts of land
- 38 million acres logged each year
- Wood is used for fuel, lumber
- Land is cleared for grazing or crops
28Clear Cutting of Forests
29Effects of Deforestation
- Increased leaching and soil erosion
- Increased flooding and sedimentation of
downstream rivers - Regional precipitation declines
- Possible amplification of the greenhouse effect
30(No Transcript)
31Regions of Deforestation
- Rates of forest loss are greatest in Brazil,
Indonesia, Mexico, and Columbia - Highly mechanized logging is proceeding in
temperate forests of the United States and Canada
32A heavy duty tree chopper for cutting down trees
in a logging operation.
33Rainforests
34Forests Burning
35Reversing Deforestation
- Coalition of groups dedicated to saving Brazils
remaining forests - Smokeless wood stoves have saved firewood in
India - Kenyan women have planted millions of trees
36NAIROBI (AFP) Feb 23, 2005
- NAIROBI (AFP) Feb 23, 2005Kenyan Nobel peace
laureate Wangari Maathai on Wednesday urged
developing nations to help fight global warming
and support the Kyoto Protocol on climate change
by joining her tree-planting campaign.
37Destroying Biodiversity
- Tropical rainforests have the greatest variety of
insects, most bird species - Some tropical forest species may prove valuable
to humans - Our primate ancestors evolved in forests like the
ones we are destroying
38Primates
- Many primate species are threaten or endangered.
39Desertification
- Conversion of large tracts of grassland to
desertlike conditions - Conversions of cropland that result in more than
10 percent decline in productivity
40Global Desertification Vulnerability
41The Dust Bowl
- Occurred in the 1930s in the Great Plains
- Overgrazing and prolonged drought left the ground
bare - 1934 winds produced dust storms that stripped
about 9 million acres of topsoil
42(No Transcript)
43Caption "Dust Over Texas." Huge boiling masses
of dust that blocked out the sun were common
sights in Texas during the Dust Bowl years. In
"To Hold This Soil", Russell Lord, 1938.
Miscellaneous Publication No. 321, U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
44Human Tragedy
45Ongoing Desertification
- Sahel region of Africa is undergoing rapid
desertification - Causes are overgrazing, overfarming, and
prolonged drought - One solution may be to substitute native
herbivores for imported cattle
46Linear dunes of the Sahara Desert encroach on
Nouakchott, the capital of Mauritania. The dunes
border a mosque at left (photograph by Georg
Gerster).
http//pubs.usgs.gov/gip/deserts/desertification/
47Water Use and Scarcity
- Most of Earths water is too salty for human
consumption - Desalinization is expensive and requires large
energy inputs - Irrigation of crops is the main use of freshwater
48Mean Annual Precipitation
49Water Distribution
50Negative Effects of Irrigation
- Salinization, mineral buildup in soil
- Elevation of the water table and waterlogging
- Depletion of aquifers
51Salinization, mineral buildup in soil
http//waterquality.montana.edu/docs/methane/irrig
ation_suitability.shtml
52Groundwater
- Aquifers - Porous layers of sand, gravel, or rock
lying below the water table. - Artesian - Pressurized aquifer intersects the
surface. (Water flows without pumping) - Recharge Zone - Area where water infiltrates into
an aquifer. - Recharge rate is often very slow.
- Presently, groundwater is being removed faster
than it can be replenished in many areas.
53Depleting Groundwater
- Groundwater is the source of nearly 40 of fresh
water in the US. - On a local level, withdrawing water faster than
it can be replenished leads to a cone of
depression in the water table, - On a broader scale, heavy pumping can deplete an
aquifer. - Ogallala Aquifer
- Mining non-renewable resource.
54Depleting Groundwater
55Ogallala Aquifer
- Extends from southern South Dakota to central
Texas - Major source of water for drinking and irrigation
- Overdrafts have depleted half the water from this
nonrenewable source
56Ogallala Aquifer
- The Ogallala Aquifer within the boundaries of
the North Plains Groundwater Conservation
District is declining at an average of 1.74 feet
per year (1,082,631 acre ft). - The aquifer is cut off from
- natural recharge sources.
http//www.npwd.org/Ogallala.htm
57Aquifer Problems
58Sink Holes and Karst Topography
CaCO3 H2SO4 ? CaSO4 H2O CO2
http//www.soils.umn.edu/academics/classes/soil212
5/doc/1-snkle.htm
59Water Pollutants
- Sewage
- Animal wastes
- Fertilizers
- Pesticides
- Industrial chemicals
- Radioactive material
- Excess heat (thermal pollution)
60Groundwater Pollution
61Wastewater Treatment
- Primary treatment
- Use of screens and settling tanks
- Addition of chlorine to kill pathogens
- Secondary treatment
- Microbes break down organic matter
- Tertiary treatment removes additional toxic
substances rarely used
62Sewage Treatment
- More than 500 pathogenic bacteria, viruses, and
parasites can travel from human or animal
excrement through water. - Natural Processes
- In many areas, outdoor urination and defecation
is the norm. - When population densities are low, natural
processes can quickly eliminate waste.
63Municipal Sewage Treatment
- Primary Treatment - Physical separation of large
solids from the waste stream. - Secondary Treatment - Biological degradation of
dissolved organic compounds. - Effluent from primary treatment transferred into
trickling bed, or aeration tank - Effluent from secondary treatment is usually
disinfected (chlorinated) before release into
nearby waterway.
64Municipal Sewage Treatment
- Tertiary Treatment - Removal of plant nutrients
(nitrates and phosphates) from secondary
effluent. - Chemicals, or natural wetlands.
- In many US cities, sanitary sewers are connected
to storm sewers. - Heavy storms can overload the system, causing
by-pass dumping of raw sewage and toxic runoff
directly into watercourses.
65Municipal Sewage Treatment
66CSO Tunnels and Treatment Facilities (Atlanta, GA
2005)
- The tunnel is part of a storage and treatment
system that involves capturing and storing
combined sewer overflows. The overflows are
stored in a large underground tunnel in bedrock
similar to the rock that comprises Stone
Mountain. When a storm is over, the captured CSO
volume is conveyed to a separate treatment system
for removal of pollutants and reduction of
harmful bacteria with sodium hypochlorite
disinfection followed by dechlorination with
sodium bisulfite before discharge to receiving
waters. The City is building two facilities, the
West Area CSO storage tunnel and the East Area
CSO underground linear storage facility to handle
the overflows.
67Milestone Completion Date for West Tunnel October
2007
These will collect storm water for treatment.
http//www.cleanwateratlanta.org/CSOTunnels/
68Oxygen-Demanding Wastes
- Water with an oxygen content gt 6 ppm will support
desirable aquatic life. - Water with lt 2 ppm oxygen will support mainly
detritivores and decomposers. - Oxygen is added to water by diffusion from wind
and waves, and by photosynthesis from green
plants, algae, and cyanobacteria. - Oxygen is removed from water by respiration and
oxygen-consuming processes.
69Oxygen-Demanding Wastes
- Biochemical Oxygen Demand - Amount of dissolved
oxygen consumed by aquatic microorganisms. - Dissolved Oxygen Content - Measure of dissolved
oxygen in the water. - Effects of oxygen-demanding wastes on rivers
depend on volume, flow, and temperature of river
water. - Oxygen Sag - Oxygen levels decline downstream
from a pollution source as decomposers metabolize
waste materials.
70Oxygen Sag
71Water Wars?
- Per capita amount of freshwater available is
decreasing - International conflicts over water use and
quality have already occurred - Building dams or dumping pollutants effect
countries downstream
72Weiss Lake Organization Declares War!
Weiss Lake Improvement Association is the
environmental and ecological watchdog for Weiss
Lake and against Metro Atlanta from taking our
WATER. (Coosa River Drainage)
73Energy Use
- Only 10 percent of energy used in developed
countries is from renewable sources - Less developed countries rely more heavily on
renewable sources (primary biomass)
74Fossil Fuels
- Coal, oil, natural gas
- Main energy source of developed countries
- Burning of fossil fuels contributes to global
warming
75http//faculty.virginia.edu/setear/courses/globwar
m/images.htm
76(No Transcript)
77(No Transcript)
78Oil
- Reserves are declining
- Many reserves are in ecologically fragile
wilderness areas - Environmental costs of extracting and
transporting reserves from such areas are high
79Total Energy Consumption
80Domestic Product
81(No Transcript)
82Oil and Gas Injection Wells
- Typically, when oil and gas are extracted, large
amounts of salt water (brine) are also brought to
the surface. This salt water can be very damaging
if it is discharged into surface water.
83Coal
- Extensive reserves exist
- Mining is very destructive
- Burning coal releases sulfur dioxides that cause
acid deposition
84Coal Strip Mining
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_mining
85EPA targets utilities mercury pollution
- Coal-burning power plants in the United States
now emit an estimated 48 tons a year of mercury,
and the EPA rule aims to reduce that to 31.3 tons
in 2010, 27.9 tons in 2015, and 24.3 tons in
2020. - Updated 303 p.m. ET March 15, 2005 (AP)
http//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6448213/did/7185001
86How Mercury Gets into the Food Chain
http//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6448213/did/7185001
87EPAs Cap and Trade Policy
- EPA sets yearly limits on mercury emissions
- Industry is assigned a quantity of tradable
mercury emissions certificates - These are bought and sold by power companies
(bid/ask system). - Some companies over pollute and some under
pollute - Each year the EPA reduces allowable emission
quantities leading to an economic solution to
pollution
88Nuclear Energy
- Used extensively in some energy-poor developed
countries - Little support in the United States
- Emits fewer air pollutants than burning coal, but
creates radioactive wastes - Potential for meltdown
89Chernobyl Accident - 1986
- Core meltdown at a nuclear power plant in the
Ukraine - 31 immediate deaths, radiation sickness and death
for others - Cloud of radiation spread by winds across Europe
- Long-term health impacts downwind
90Map of Chernobyl Region
91Nuclear Power in France
- When the Civaux nuclear power plant comes on
line sometime in the next 12 months, France will
have 56 working nuclear plants, generating 76 of
her electricity. (Frontline)
http//www.icjt.org/npp/drzava.php?drzava8
92 93Solar-Hydrogen Energy
- Photovoltaic cells use sunlight energy to split
water - Hydrogen gas produced in this way can be used as
fuel or to generate electricity - Clean, renewable technology
94Fuel Cells
95Farmed Hydrogen
- Photobiological Hydrogen Production
- Aquatic algae bio-engineered to produce hydrogen
gas rather than sugars via photosynthesis - Place algae in a clear tube, reduce sulfur, place
in sunlight, and collect the hydrogen!
96Hydrogen from Algae
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
97Shec labs System
- Mirror array focuses sunlight on a hydrogen
generator (850 C) - Waste gases (methane, CO2, etc) are heated and
converted to hydrogen gas. Hydrogen gas (plus O2)
is used to power fuel cells.
www.shec-labs.com/press/images.php
98Wind Energy
- An indirect use of solar energy
- Wind farms are arrays of turbines
- Can supplement needs of some regions but is not
dependable enough on it own
99Giant wind turbines at Aapua, Sweden
http//www.xahlee.org/Whirlwheel_dir/windturbine.h
tml
100San Gorgonio Field Near Palm Springs, CA
101Overview of Wind Energy in California
- the year 2004, wind energy in California
produced 4,258 million kilowatt-hours of
electricity, about 1.5 percent of the state's
total electricity. - According to the Electric Power Research
Institute, the cost of producing wind energy has
decreased nearly four fold since 1980. The
levelized cost of energy from wind turbines in
1993 was about 7.5 cents per kilowatt/hour. With
current wind research and development efforts,
the Energy Commission estimates that newer
technologies can reduce the cost of wind energy
to 3.5 cents per kilowatt-hour.
http//www.energy.ca.gov/wind/overview.html
102Electricity Costs (2003)
103Fusion
- Energy is released when atomic nuclei fuse
- This process produces solar energy
- Attempts to mimic this process on Earth require
use of lasers, magnetic fields - Not yet a commercially viable energy source
104Fusion Reaction
- Note Fusion tutorial available at website below.
http//hif.lbl.gov/tutorial/tutorial.html
105Changes in the World of Life
- Adaptations of species have changed the
environment - Photosynthetic organisms that arose during the
Proterozoic altered the atmosphere by adding
oxygen - Change is natural
106Humans and Change
- Unlike previous species, human have the capacity
to observe and make decisions about the changes
they bring about. - A couple of examples of using misplaced
resources.
107Gas for the Greenhouse
- "By transporting CO2 by pipeline from the Shell
refineries in Pernis to the cultivators in the
Westland, the emission of greenhouse gas can be
greatly reduced. At the same time, the farmers
can save a lot of money there is no more need
for them to produce their CO2 themselves".
http//www.radionetherlands.nl/features/science/05
1107rf
108OCAP Waste CO2 Used in Greenhouses
6 CO2 6 H2O sunlight ?
C6H12O6 6O2
109Anything Into OilChanging World Technologies,
Inc.
Carthage, Missouri, turkey plant accumulates
1.3 million gallons a day of turkey grease,
guts, fat, and feathers that is stored in
lagoons and sent to waste treatment
facilities Estimated production of fuel oil,
500 barrels a day.
http//www.perc.org/perc.php?id290
Twenty tons of slaughterhouse turkey parts,
freshly dumped by a truck, await processing into
oil, gas, and minerals at the thermal conversion
process plant in Carthage, Missouri. When the
plant reaches full capacity in the fall, it will
process 10 dump trucks of leftovers, one tanker
truck of blood, and one tanker truck of
discarded restaurant grease every 24 hours.