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Humans in the Biosphere

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Title: Humans in the Biosphere


1
Chapter 6
  • Humans in the Biosphere

2
The Effect of Human Activity
  • How do our daily activities affect the
    environment?

3
Living on Island Earth
  • Most of us probably dont think of land, food,
    and water as limited resources.
  • Today human activity has used or altered roughly
    half of all the land thats not covered with ice
    and snow.

4
Agriculture
  • Agriculture impacts natural resources, including
  • Fresh water
  • Fertile soil
  • Fertilizer production and farm machinery also
    consume large amounts of fossil fuels.

5
Development
  • Dense human communities produce lots of wastes
    that, if not disposed of properly, can affect
    air, water, and soil resources.

6
Industrial Growth
  • The conveniences of modern life require a lot of
    energy to produce and power.
  • Most of this energy is obtained by burning fossil
    fuels
  • coal
  • oil
  • natural gas

7
Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources
  • Ecosystem goods and services are classified as
    either renewable or nonrenewable.
  • A renewable resource can be produced or replaced
    by a healthy ecosystem. Wind is a renewable
    resource.

8
Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources
  • Some resources are nonrenewable resources because
    natural processes cannot replenish them within a
    reasonable amount of time.
  • Fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas are
    nonrenewable resources formed from buried organic
    materials over millions of years.

9
Sustainable Resource Use
  • Using natural resources in a way that does not
    cause long-term environmental harm is called
    sustainable development.
  • Sustainable development should cause no
    long-term harm to the soil, water, and climate on
    which it depends. It should consume as little
    energy and material as possible.

10
Ecosystem Goods and Services
  • What goods and services do ecosystems provide for
    us?
  • What happens if they are destroyed?

11
The Value of Biodiversity
  • Biological diversity, or biodiversity, is the
    total of all the genetically based variation in
    all organisms in the biosphere.

12
The Value of Biodiversity
  • Why is biodiversity important?
  • Biodiversitys benefits to society include
    contributions to medicine and agriculture, and
    the provision of ecosystem goods and services.

13
Threats to Biodiversity
  • What are the most significant threats to
    biodiversity?
  • Humans reduce biodiversity by altering habitats,
    hunting, introducing invasive species, releasing
    pollution into food webs, and contributing to
    climate change.

14
Threats to Biodiversity
  • Human activity today is causing the greatest
    wave of extinctions since dinosaurs disappeared.
    The current rate of species loss is approaching
    1000 times the typical rate.
  • As species disappear, the potential contribution
    to human knowledge that is carried in their genes
    is lost.

15
Conserving Biodiversity
  • How do we preserve biodiversity?
  • To conserve biodiversity, we must protect
    individual species, preserve habitats and
    ecosystems, and make certain that human neighbors
    of protected areas benefit from participating in
    conservation efforts.

16
Ecology in Action
  • How can ecology guide us toward a sustainable
    future?
  • By (1) recognizing a problem in the environment,
    (2) researching that problem to determine its
    cause, and then (3) using scientific
    understanding to change our behavior, we can have
    a positive impact on the global environment.

17
Case Study 1 Atmospheric Ozone
  • Between 20 and 50 kilometers above Earths
    surface, the atmosphere contains a relatively
    high concentration of ozone called the ozone
    layer.
  • Ozone at ground level is a pollutant, but the
    natural ozone layer absorbs harmful ultraviolet
    (UV) radiation from sunlight. By absorbing UV
    light, the ozone layer serves as a global
    sunscreen.

18
Recognizing a Problem Hole in the Ozone Layer
  • Beginning in the 1970s, satellite data revealed
    that the ozone concentration over Antarctica was
    dropping during the southern winter. An area of
    lower ozone concentration is commonly called an
    ozone hole.

19
Recognizing a Problem Hole in the Ozone Layer
  • For several years after the ozone hole was first
    discovered, it grew larger and lasted longer each
    year. These images show the progression from 1981
    to 1999. The darker blue color in the later image
    indicates that the ozone layer had thinned since
    1981.

20
Researching the Cause CFCs
  • In 1974 a research team demonstrated that gases
    called chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) could damage
    the ozone layer.
  • CFCs were once widely used as propellants in
    aerosol cans as coolant in refrigerators,
    freezers, and air conditioners and in the
    production of plastic foams.

21
Changing Behavior Regulation of CFCs
  • Once the research on CFCs was published and
    accepted by the scientific community, the rest
    was up to policymakers.
  • Following recommendations of ozone researchers,
    191 countries signed a major agreement, the
    Montreal Protocol, which banned most uses of
    CFCs.
  • .

22
Changing Behavior Regulation of CFCs
  • Ozone-destroying halogens from CFCs have been
    steadily decreasing since about 1994, evidence
    that the CFC ban has had positive long-term
    effects.
  • Current data predict that although the ozone
    hole will continue to fluctuate in size from year
    to year, it should disappear for good around the
    middle of this century.
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