Title: APES year in review
1APES year in review
2015-16, the year everyone gets a 5!
2I. Earth systems and resources
- Earth Science concepts
- The atmosphere
- Global water resources and use
- Soil and soil dynamics
- 10-15
3A. Earth Science concepts
4Geologic time scale
- Earth 4.5 bya
- Life 3.8 bya
- Eukaryotes 2.1 bya
- Cambrian explosion 542 mya
- Modern humans 200,000 ya
5Plate tectonics, earthquakes, volcanism
6Global air circulation
7Seasons, solar intensity, and latitude
- Earths tilt ? different amounts of solar
intensity at different latitudes/hemispheres ?
seasons
8B. The Atmosphere
9Structure of the atmosphere
10Troposphere
- Where weather happens
- 78 N2
- 20 O2
- Less than 2
- H2O vapor (.01-4)
- Argon gas (1)
- CO2 (0.04)
- Trace gases
11Coriolis effect
12ENSO
13C. Global water resources and use
14Earths water supply
15Water Facts
- The primary use for fresh water in U.S. is for
agriculture. - In our homes, we use the most fresh water to
wash, clean and flush. - The typical person in an industrialized nation
uses 700-1000 gallons per week
16Human effects on the Hydrologic Cycle
17Rain shadow
18The Ogallala Aquifer
- Increasing irrigation is draining it
- Supplies drinking water to 2.3 million peoplee
19Human interference with water supply
- Mono Lake
- The water in the lake was diverted from the lake
to the city of Los Angeles. It became a salt bed. - ? Salt concentration due to evaporation
- Three Gorges Dam in China
- China needs to meet the growing demand for energy
- Huge environmental impact
- Hundreds of thousands of people displaced (not to
mention the ecosystems which will be flooded)
20Consequences of making food
- Air
- Greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels
- Other air pollutants from fossil fuels
- Pollutions from pesticide sprays
- Soil
- Erosion
- Loss of fertility
- Salinization
- Waterlogging
- Desertification
- Water
- Aquifer depletion
- Increased runoff and flooding from land cleared
to grow crops - Fish kills from pesticide runoff
- Surface and groundwater pollution from pesticides
and fertilizers - Over fertilization of lakes -gt eutrophication
21D. Soil and soil dynamics
22Soil degradation
- Formed from weathering
- Demand for food destroys the soil
- erosion
- minerals in soil are depleted
- salinization
- increased use of pesticides
- Overuse of fresh water
23Soil profile
24Texture
25Loam
- Theoretically ideal
- 40 sand
- 40 silt
- 20 clay
26Rock cycle
272
28II. The Living World
- Ecosystem structure
- Energy flow
- Ecosystem diversity
- Natural ecosystem change
- Natural biogeochemical cycles
- 10-15
29A. Ecosystem structure
30Levels of organization of matter
- Universe
- Biosphere
- Biomes
- Ecosystems
- Communities
- Populations
- Organisms
- Cells
- Atoms
31Chemistry
- Atoms basic units of matter
- Electron
- Proton
- Neutron
- Other vocab to know
- Chemical bonds how atoms are held together
- Ionic
- Covalent
- Molecule/compound two or more atoms bonded
together - pH scale
- Base alkaline
- Acid
32Organic Compounds
- C-C bonds and/or C-H bonds
- Can be natural or synthetic
- Natural make up living systems
- Synthetic man-made
33Evolutionary Change
- Vocabulary that you need to know
- DNA
- Chromosome
- Gene
- allele
- Central Dogma
- DNA - blueprint
- RNA - carpenter
- Protein - house, wood
34Mutations
- Mutations are naturally random events
- Normal variation
- Chemical
- UV
- Radiation
- Genetic Trait
- Only passed down if an organism reproduces
- Only genetics traits can evolve through natural
selection (traits acquired during lifetime cannot
be acted on by natural selection)
35Ecosystems
- Plants and animals interacting with their abiotic
environment - Exist in biomes
- Climate avg weather over long time
- Weather daily variations in temp and
precipitation - Microclimate and Other Abiotic Factors
- Light intensity
- Soil type
- Topography
36Relationships
- Mutualism
- Flowers insects
- Commensalism
- Predator/prey
- host parasite
- Competition
- Habitat vs. niche
37Limiting Factors
- Temperature, light, oxygen, carbon dioxide,
precipitation - Synergistic effects
38Ecosystems how they work
- All stable ecosystems recycle matter and get
energy from the sun - All matter is recycled through the lithosphere,
hydrosphere, and atmosphere. - Nothing is created nothing is destroyed
- Keystone species
- Indicator species
- Edge effects
- Species diversity
39Biomes
- Terrestrial
- Rainforest, tundra, etc.
- Aquatic
- Streams
- Lakes
- Wetlands
40B. Energy flow
41Trophic Relationship
- Food webs
- Trophic levels
- Producers
- Herbivores
- primary carnivores
42Biomass and Biomass Pyramid
- All biomass gets its energy from the sun
- Only 10 of energy from one trophic level moves
to the next trophic level - Energy released is high potential energy
molecules (like glucose) then converted to low
potential energy molecules (like carbon dioxide) - Concept of eating lower on the biomass pyramid
43Food chains
- Bioaccumulation
- Build up in an organisms
- Biomagnification
- Build up in a food chain
- Reverse rule of 10
44Rachel Carson
- Rachel Carson was a scientist who wrote Silent
Spring in 1962 - It addressed the growing use of pesticides (DDT)
and their unpredicted effects on song birds - Original users of pesticides did not know that
the poisons used to kill insects would accumulate
in other living things and kill them too - BIOACCUMULATION
45More Cool Environmentalist
- John Muir Sierra Club
- Ansel Adams Photography (Yosemite)
- Aldo Leopold Sand County Almanac
- Henry David Thoreau Walden
- Garrett Hardin Tragedy of the Commons
46Photosynthesis
- Very inefficient (Only 1 of the energy from the
sun is used) - Chlorophyll absorbs light to drive
photosynthesis - Formula H2O CO2 ? C6H12O6 O2
- Cell respiration formula is the opposite
- Plants use glucose to
- Construct other molecules
- Build their cell wall
- Store energy
- Source of energy
47C. Ecosystem diversity
48Why do species change?
- Environmental resistance and biotic potential
- Selective pressure on mutations
- Speciation
- Creation of a new species based on reproductive
isolation - A change in an ecosystem causes 1 of 3 things
happen to organisms - Evolve, migrate, or die
49Speciation (Galapagos Finches)
50Geological Context (space and time for
evolution)
- Natural selection
- Plate tectonics
- Geological time scale
- Selective breeding
- Artificial selection
51Ecosystem services
- Benefits of biodiversity
- Clean air
- Clean water
- Aesthetic value
- Potential
52Loss of Biodiversity
- Habitat destruction leads to a loss of many
species starting with the plants - exact of species lost is unknown because not
all species are identified - strong ecosystems need biodiversity
- 1959-1980 25 of all prescription drugs from
natural resources - Wild species keep domestic species vigorous
- Aesthetics
53D. Natural ecosystem change
54Population and Succession
- Top 6 most abundant elements in living things
- CHONPS (not in order)
- Top 8 elements in the earths crust (in order)
- O, Si, Al, Fe, Ca, Na, P, Mg
55Fires in Ecosystem
- Maintain balance of species and energy in
ecosystems over the long run. - Beneficial b/c provide nutrients for soil
- We avoid natural fires, but unnatural fire kill
the whole tree
56Succession - One species gradually replaced by
another in an ecosystem
- Primary new ecosystem where there were no
living things before. Cooled lava, receded
glacier, mud slide - Secondary- ecosystem used to be there. Fire,
humans clear an area - Aquatic lakes taken over by terrestrial
ecosystem - Climax ecosystem- in balance only changes if
major interference
57Primary succession
- Must create new soil for plants to grow
- The first plants to come in are called pioneer
species - Lichen
- Moss
- Microbes
58Climate shifts
59E. Natural biogeochemical cycles
60Carbon cycle
- Carbon is tied up in living things, absorbed in
oceans and land. Released as CO2. Then Plants! - Photosynthesis!
- Moving fossil fuels (which took millions of years
to form) to the atmosphere (in hundreds of years)
is a major component of global warming. - Hydrocarbon fuels to CO2
61Nitrogen cycle
- Main reserve in the atmosphere
- Living things must get N from ammonium (NH4) or
nitrate (NO3) - N from the atmosphere must be fixed
- Change N2 into ammonium or nitrate
- Rhizobium (bacteria living in roots of legumes)
fig 3-10 - Industrial
- Lightning
- Burning fossil fuels
62Phosphorus cycle
- No gas phase, only solid and liquid
- Man-made fertilizers contain organic phosphates
- Because P is a limiting factor in aquatic
systems, it leads to eutrophication - The rain forest is very good at recycling P,
except when we cut it down
63 element Main nonliving reservoir Main living reservoir Other nonliving reservoir Human-induced problem
Carbon C Atmo CO2 Carbohydrates (CH2O)n And all organic molecules Hydro Carbonate (CO3-2) Bicarbonate (HCO3-) Litho minerals Global warming Carbon from fossil fuels underground are burned and released into the air as CO2
Nitrogen N Atmo N2 Proteins and other N- containing organic molecules Hydro Ammonium NH4 Nitrate NO3- Nitrite NO2- Eutrophication Fertilizers contain human-made nitrates that end up in the water
Phos-phorous P Litho rocks as PO4-3 no gas phase DNA ATP phospholipids Hydro Phosphate PO4-3 Eutrophication Fertilizers contain human-made phosphates that end up in the water Cutting down rainforest stops recycling of P
64Main Topics
- Conservation of matter
- Energy flow and the biomass pyramid
- Population dynamics
- Biotic potential vs environmental resistance
- Population equilibrium and balanced herbivory
- Introduced species effects on ecosystems
653
66III. Population
- Population biology concepts
- Human populations
- Human population dynamics
- Population size
- Impacts of population growth
- 10-15
67A. Population biology concepts
68R vs K
69Carrying capacity determined by limiting
resources
70B. Human population
- Human population dynamics
- Population size
- Impacts of population growth
71Human population growth
72Human population distribution
73Population growth rates
- Crude birth rate number birth per 1000
- Crude death rate number death per 1000
- Growth rate natural increase in population
- If negative, the population is shrinking
- Immigration migration of individuals into a
population from another area or country - Emigration migration of individuals from a
population bound for another country - Growth rate (births immigration) (deaths
emigration)
74Doubling time
75Demographic transitions
76Demographic transition
- As countries develop their death rate drops then
their birth rate drops because - Phase 2
- Medical care
- Nutrition
- Technology
- Phase 3
- Birth control
- Education (of women)
- Lower infant mortality
- Less child labor
77Fertility rates
- Total fertility avg of children born per
woman - Fertility of 2 replacement level
- Under 2 shrinking population
- Over 2 growing pop.
- For developed countries 2.1
- For developing countries 2.6 (or higher)
78Developed vs developing
- Canada, U.S., Australia, Western Europe (Denmark)
- Latin America, China, Africa (Kenya)
- 80 of worlds pop and growing
- 20 of the worlds pop. lives in absolute
poverty, illiterate, lack clean H2O and dont
have enough food
79Population sizes to know
World 7 billion
China 1.4 billion
India 1.3 billion
US 319 million
Indonesia 250 million
80Impacts of human population growth
- More than 7 billion people
- Last 25 yrs population grew by 2 billion
- Projected population is 10 billion by 2050
- Increasing pop ? increasing
- Need for resources
- Hunger drought
- Habitat destruction
- Disease transmission
- Poverty
81The human population
- World population trends
- Calculations
- Demographic transition
- Age structure diagrams
- Developed vs. developing countries
- Fertility rates
- World bank
- 1994 UN conference in Cairo- program of action
824
83IV. Land and water use
- Agriculture
- Forestry
- Rangelands
- Other land use
- Mining
- Fishing
- Global economics
10-15
84A. Agriculture
85Major Environmental Effects of Food Production
- Biodiversity Loss
- Loss and degradation of habitat from clearing
grasslands and forests and draining wetlands - Fish kills from pesticide runoff
- Killing wild predators to protect live stock
- Loss of genetic diversity from replacing
thousands of wild crop strains with a few
monoculture strains
- Human Health
- Nitrates pesticide residues in drinking water,
food, and air - Contamination of water with disease organisms
from livestock wastes
86The Green Revolution
- To eliminate hunger by improving crop performance
by using - New crop cultivars
- Irrigation
- Fertilizers
- Pesticides
- Mechanization
- Results
- Did not eliminate famine
- Population still increasing
- Increase cost of production
- An increased negative environmental impact
- Didnt work for everyone
87Endocrine Disrupters
- Interfere with normal hormone action
- Can interfere with development
- Are often connected to cancer
- Can interfere with sexual activity (alligators)
- Are found in plastics and some pesticides
88Risks and Pests
- Hazard - Anything that causes
- Injury, disease, or death to humans
- Damage to property
- Destruction of the environment
- Cultural hazard - a risk that a person chooses to
engage in - Risk
- The probability of suffering as a result of a
hazard - Perception
- What people think the risks are
89Insecticides/Pesticides
- Integrated pest management includes
- adjusting environmental conditions
- chemical pesticides
- disease resistant varieties
- crop rotation
- biological controls
- Insecticides kills plants, mammals, fish, birds
- A broad spectrum pesticide is effective towards
many types of pests
90DDT
- Persistent, synthetic organic compound and a
subject to biomagnification in food chains - Accumulates in fat
- Was not used for handling weeds
91Diseases
- Lyme disease can be processed to humans through a
bite from an infected tick - Mosquitoes causes Malaria, the vector for
Plasmodium - The protozoan of the genus Plasmodium is the
causative agent of malaria
92Diseases contd
- Lack of access to safe drinking water is a major
cause of disease transmission in developing
countries. - Epidemiology is the study of the presence,
distribution and control of a diseases in a
population - Morbidity is the incidence of disease in a
population - Mortality is the incidence of death in a
population
93B. Forestry
- Ecological services 4.7 trillion per year
- Climate regulation, erosion control, waste
treatment, etc. - Tree harvesting
- Selective cutting vs clear-cutting vs strip
cutting
94Forests, fires, ecosystem maintenance
95C. Rangelands
- Ecological services
- Overgrazing ? erosion, compaction
- Deforestation
- Desertification
- Management federal rangelands
- Regulate duration of organisms grazing
- Replant areas
- Apply fertilizer
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97D. Other land use
- Urban land development
- Transportation infrastructure
- Public and federal lands
- Land conservation options
- Sustainable land-use strategies
98Urban land development
- Planned development
- Mixed zone vs separate zones
- Suburban sprawl
- Car centered development (separate zones)
- Urbanization
- Movement ? cities ? suburbs
99Transportation infrastructure
- Federal highways
- Canals and channels
- Roadless areas
- Ecosystem impacts
- Habitat fragmentation
- Habitat preservation
100Public and federal lands
- Wilderness areas
- Most restricted (only hiking, fishing, camping,
non-motorized boats) - National parks
- Recreation areas, battlefields, historic sites
- Wildlife refuges
- Protect areas for animal breeding, endangered
animals, etc. - Can have mining logging, oil and gas development
- Forests Wetlands
101Land conservation options
- Preservation
- Remediation
- Mitigation
- Restoration
- CERCLA (superfund)
102Sustainable land-use strategies
- 4 principals suggested to govern public lands
- Protect biodiversity
- No subsidies/tax breaks for extracting resources
- Compensate people for use of their property
- Companies be responsible for any environmental
damage
103Easter Island
- Sustainability
- A system/process can continue indefinitely
without depleting resources used - Stewardship
- Caring for something that does not belong to you
104Protection of Biodiversity and Ecosystems
- Threatened
- If trend continues, the species will be
endangered - Endangered
- If trend continues, the species will go extinct
- 25 of drugs used as medicines come from natural
plant sources. - Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (1989)
- 300,000 birds died as a result of that particular
oil spill. The area, Prince William Sound, is
still recovering
105E. Mining
- Surface vs subsurface
- Acid mine drainage
- SMCRA
- Regulates strip mining and encourages reclamation
of mined land
106F. Fishing
- Techniques
- Line fishing, cage farming, purse-seine fishing,
trawler fishing, drift-net fishing - Overfishing
- Aquaculture
- Shallow, near shore
- Deep sea
- Marine mammal protection act
107G. Global economics
- Globalization
- World bank
- Tragedy of the Commons
- Government regulations and international treaties
can solve
108World Bank
- Special agency of the UN
- Receives from developed countries and loans to
developing countries - Sometimes this backfires by increasing debt
- Oversees all types of issues, not just
environmental issues - Ex. electricity, roads, new modern technology
1095
110V. Energy resources and consumption
- Energy concepts
- Energy consumption
- Fossil fuel resources and use
- Nuclear energy
- Hydroelectric power
- Energy conservation
- Renewable energy
10-15
111A. Energy concepts
112Physics
- Energy is measured in calories
- Calorie amount of heat needed to raise 1 gram
of water 1 degree Celsius. - Kilocalorie 1,000 calories
- 1st law of thermodynamics
- Energy cannot be created nor destroyed, only
change forms (potential ? kinetic) - 2nd law of thermodynamics
- Energy transformation increases disorder
(entropy) of the universe - Heat is the lowest grade of energy
113Electricity
- Electricity is a secondary energy source because
it relies on another energy source to create it - 20 from nuclear
- 57 from coal
- Oil, geothermal, solar, wind, hydroelectric
- No boiling water required for these sources
- Basic production of electricity
- Boil water ? produce steam ? turn turbines ?
generate electron flow through a wire
114B. Energy consumption
115Energy facts
- Brief history of energy
- 1700-1800 Fire wood
- 1900-1920 Coal
- Industrial revolution medical revolution ?
exponential growth of population and energy use - 1950-now Crude oil
- Production of crude oil withdrawing it from
reserves - OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries) - Mainly mid-east countries
116C. Fossil fuel resources and use
117Formation of
118More Energy Facts
- We get 50 of crude oil from foreign sources
- Alaska pipeline built to help increase production
of domestic crude oil - Types of coal
119Coal
- Environmental Consequences
- Production
- Ecosystem damage, reclamation difficult, acid
mine runoff, mine tailings, erosion, black lung,
radon - Transport
- Energy intensive because of weight and number of
train cars needed - Use
- Fossil fuel with largest source of CO2 and
greatest quantity of contaminants, large volume
of waste, acid precipitation
120Oil The Most Important Fossil Fuel in the
American Economy
- Environmental Consequences
- Production
- Local ecosystem damage possible
- Transport
- Oil spills cause local and regional ecosystem
damage - Use
- Photochemical smog, particulates, acid
precipitation, CO2
121Natural Gas
- Possibly a transition fuel between fossil fuel
and alternative energy sources - Environmental Consequences
- Production
- Local ecosystem damage possible if oil or coal is
part of the deposit - Transport
- Can be explosive
- Use
- Produces the least air pollutants of all the
fossil fuels
122(No Transcript)
123D. Nuclear energy
124Nuclear Power
- Splitting of uraniums nucleus gives off heat
that can be used to boil water and turn a turbine
and generator to create electricity - Pros
- No CO2 emissions, no particulate emissions
- Cons
- Radiation can lead to damaged DNA, costs,
radioactive waste, thermal pollution
125Nuclear important facts
- Fusion
- Combination of 2 atoms
- Fission
- Splitting an atom
- Radioisotope
- Unstable radioactive isotope
126Uranium is radioactive
- When U235 is hit by a neutron, it is split
(fission) into two smaller elements such as Kr
and Ba plus three neutrons which sustain the
chain reaction. - Natural uranium is mined and used as fuel in
nuclear reactors - Most (99.3) of the naturally occurring uranium
is U238. - For a nuclear reactor, this must be purified to
4 U235 and 96 U238. (very expensive)
127How does a Power Plant Operate?
- Water moderator slows down neutrons
- Neutron-absorbing material control rod
- Fuel Rods 1/3 replaced each year
- Redundant safety systems
- Heat transfer system
- Cooling system
128Waste Disposal
- All fuel rods are still in cooling ponds at
commercial nuclear facilities - Concerns Geological activity, Intrusion of water
table, distances for wastes travel, radioactive
decay and half-lives
129Accidents
- Chernobyl
- 4/26/86
- Ukraine
- Complete meltdown
- Three Mile Island
- 3/28/79
- Pennsylvania (Harrisburg)
- Partial meltdown, no one known to be hurt
130E. Hydroelectric power
- Dams
- Environmental ecological impacts
- Flood control
- Salmon
- Silting
131F. Energy conservation
- Energy efficiency
- CAFÉ standards
- Regulate fuel efficiency
- Strategies to improve conservation
- Hybrid electric vehicles
- Mass transit
132G. Renewable energy
133Renewable Energy
- Not fossil fuels, not nuclear
- Wind, falling H2O, geothermal, biomass, tidal,
solar
134Solar Energy
- Passive solar
- Large south-facing windows, heavy drapes to trap
heat at night, interior bricks to trap heat - Shade windows in summer
- Even though back up systems are required, and
solar heating may only lessen the need for
heating oil a few , it will help us adapt to
diminishing oil supplies. - Active solar
- Photovoltaic (PV) panels can be used to convert
the energy from the sun into electricity. - Electrons from the silicon in the PV panel are
pushed through a wire by photons from the sun
creating an electric current.
1356
136VI. Pollution
- Pollution types
- Impacts on the environment and human health
- Economic impacts
- 25-30
137A. Pollution types
- Air pollution
- Noise pollution
- Water pollution
- Solid waste
138Air pollution
- ppm vs ppb
- Expensive health care costs, human lives
- Acute, Chronic, Carcinogenic
- Damages buildings, bridges, statues, books
- Aesthetics
- Damage to Plants
- Agriculture crops loss 5 billion/year
- Forests
139Major Outdoor Air Pollutants
- Direct products of combustion and evaporation
- Examples
- Suspended particulate matter
- Carbon Monoxide
- Sulfur Oxides (from combustion of coal)
- Primary pollutants undergo rxns in atmosphere
- Examples
- Volatile Organic Compounds
- Ozone and other photochemical oxidants
- Nitrogen Oxides (can be both)
140Sources of air pollution
- Natural
- Sulfur Volcanoes, sea spray, microbial
- Nitrogen oxides lightening, forest fires,
microbial - Anthropogenic (human caused)
- Sulfur oxides coal burning plants, industry,
fossil fuels. - Nitrogen oxides power plants, industrial fuel
combustion, transportation - Effect areas hundreds of miles from the source of
emissions, generally not the whole globe
141Temperature inversion
142Heat islands
143Indoor Air Pollutants
- Types benzene, formaldehyde,
radon, cigarette smoke - Sources off gassing from furniture, rugs and
building materials, dry cleaning, cleaning
fluids, disinfectants, pesticides, heaters - Buildings with too many indoor air pollutants are
called sick buildings because more than 20 of
the people are sick due to occupying the building.
144Solutions Reducing Emissions
- Best way Conservation, just use less!
- Input Control
- Cleaner burning gasoline
- increased fuel efficiency
- alternative modes of transportation
- decrease the number of miles driven
- changes in land use decisions
- catalytic converter
145Output Control
- Scrubbers exhaust fumes through a spray of H2O
containing lime (CaCO3) SO2 ? CaSO3 - Coal washing to get rid of sulfur
- Fluidized bed combustion
- Produces a waste ash that must be disposed of)
146Noise pollution
- Source traffic in cities
- Human health effects
- Control measures
147Water Pollution
- Types
- Nutrients, fertilizers, waste
- Microbial
- Suspended matter
- Oil spillage
- Causes wastewater, runoff, spills, etc.
- Point vs non-point
- Eutrophication
- Groundwater pollution
148Solid waste
- Disposal
- Landfill
- Incinerator
- Recycling
- Recycling, composing, etc.
149Sewage treatment
- Sewage treatment is a common practice
- In the 1970s many cities were still dumping raw
sewage into waterways - In 1972, the Clean water act provided funding for
upgrading sewage treatment plants - Test for sewage contamination in drinking H2O ?
Fecal Coliform test
150Sewage Treatment
- Raw sewage (99 H2O)
- Preliminary Treatment- allow grit to settle
- 1 separating Raw Sludge from H2O
- Raw Sludge May contain heavy metals
- If it does it needs treatment, to remove the
toxic chemicals - 2 AKA Biological Treatment- bacteria feeds on
the organic material - 3 Chemical (chlorine, UV light)
151Home Septic Systems
- Do not use chlorine
- Do use settling tank to settle organic solids
- Lets waste water percolate into the soil
bacterial decomposition
152Municipal Solid Waste
- Most is paper
- 55 of MSW is disposed in landfills
- 17 of MSW is combusted, mostly in
waste-to-energy (WTE) combustion facilities - The best solution to solid waste problems is to
reduce waste at its source. - More than 75 of MSW is recyclable
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154B. Impacts on the environment and human health
- Hazards to human health
- Hazardous chemicals in the environment
155Cigarette Smoking
- Leading cause of cancer in U.S.
- Can cause cancer, lung disease, a bigger risk of
death in addition with other types of air
pollution. - Highest health risk in U.S.
156Love Canal, NY
- The government allowed housing to be build over
the toxic waste dump and people got sick - Problem first discovered in 1978
- First national emergency in the US because of
toxic waste - Led to the superfund legislation.
- Superfund sites
- comes from taxes on chemical industries
- 50 of the spent on legal costs
157Heath effects
- Acute vs chronic
- Acute sudden and severe
- Chronic gets worse and worse over time
- Dose response
158Hazardous Waste
- Cleaning solvents, acids and bases, wastes from
agriculture and industry, etc. - Halogenated hydrocarbons
- Organic compounds with a halogen (bromine,
iodine, ect.) replacing a hydrogen - Used as pesticides
- Used to make plastic
- Resistant to biodegradation
- Chlorinated hydrocarbons
- Are synthetic organic compounds
159Acids and Bases
- pH-log of hydrogen ions in a solution. Therefore
each number higher on the pH scale is 10X more
basic - Basic OH- ions gt7
- Acidic H ions lt7
- Neutral pure water 7
- Normal rain 6.4
- Acid rain lt 5.5
160Hazardous waste disposal
- Incinerate
- Plasma arc torch
- Deep well disposal
- Pump below aquifers
- Surface impoundments
- Ponds ? as water evaporates waste becomes
concentrated - Secure hazardous waste landfill
161C. Economic impacts
- Cost-benefit analysis
- Externalities
- Costs/benefits that affect others
- Example Air pollution from manufacturing
activities - Marginal costs
- Most efficient ? no pollution
- Sustainability
1627
163VII. Global change
- Stratospheric ozone
- Global warming
- Loss of biodiversity
- 10-15
164A. Stratospheric ozone
165Ozone (O3)
- Stratospheric ozone GOOD
- Shields us from harmful UVB rays
- Thinning over the South Pole
- Is like sunscreen for the earth
- Is formed by UV light, is broken down by high
energy UV light - Reaction proceeds backwards and forwards
repeatedly - Tropospheric ozone BAD
- Lung damage
- GHG
166Ozone depletion
- Causes
- Chloroflurocarbons Chlorine ions strip an O from
O3 and form ClO molecules - Effects
- Increase UV light reaches earths surface
- Sun damage to animals and humans
- Skin cancer, cataracts, etc.
- Crop damage
- Prevention
- Montreal Protocol reduction in CFCs
- Exception CFCs not banned in developing countries
167B. Global warming
168Global warming
- The natural greenhouse effect is important to
keep the earth warm enough for life to exist
- Global warming occurs when humans contribute too
much of these greenhouse gases leading to a (1-3
degree C) rise in the global average temperature.
169Greenhouse gases
- Natural
- CO2
- Water vapor
- Methane
- Nitrous oxide
- Synthetic
- Chlorofluorocarbons
- Hydrofluorocarbons
- Perfluorocarbons
- Sulfur hexafluoride
170Global Atmospheric Changes
- Global Warming
- CO2 produced from fossil fuel burning acts like a
blanket around the earth. - Photosynthesis takes CO2 out of atmosphere
- 6CO2 6H2O gt 602 C6H12O6
- Atmospheric warming ? ocean warming ? changes in
ecosystems ? warm water can hold less CO2 (and
O2) - Increasing CO2 in air ? increasing CO2 in water ?
increases acidity of water ? changes in ecosystem
171Keeling curve
172(No Transcript)
173C. Loss of biodiversity
- HIPPCO
- Habitat loss, invasive species, pollution,
overpopulation of humans, climate change,
overexploitation - 6th mass extinction
- Conservation Laws
- Endangered species act
- ID and protect endangered species
- Penalties for jeopardizing species
- CITES
- Bans hunting, capturing, and selling of
threatened/endangered species