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Chapter 1-Studying the State of Our Earth
APESUnit I: Sustainability
Objectives1. 1. Define the field of environmental science and
discuss its importance2. Identify ways in which humans have altered and
continue to alter our environment3. Describe key environmental indicators that help us
evaluate the health of our planet4. Define sustainability and explain how it can be
measured using the ecological footprint5. Explain how the scientific method is used to study
environmental problems6. Describe some of the unique challenges and
limitations of environmental science.
I. Studying the environmentEnvironmental Studies:
Case Study: the mysterious Neuse River Fish Killer (Pfiesteria)
1)Human activities can affect environment in complex and unexpected ways
2)Environmental science can be controversial3)Findings are not always as clear cut as they
appear to be
Environmental IndicatorsHow are planet’s life support services being degraded
by human induced changes?Ecosystem Services: The processes by which life
supporting resources are producedEnvironmental Indicators: describe current state of an
enviro systemSustainability: living in such a way that resource use
does not deprive future generations of that resource; finding alternatives and protecting capacity of environment to continue to supply resources; The capacity to endure
Stewardship: management of resources to ensure the ability of future generations to; the ability of the earth’s natural systems to adapt to changing environmental conditions into the very long-term future.
Three principles of sustainability
1) Reliance on solar energy: warms the planet, provides energy for photosynthesis, powers indirect forms of solar energy such as wind and flowing water. 2) Biodiversity: variety of organisms, natural systems in which they exist and interact, the services these organisms provide, and the ability to adapt to changing environmental conditions.3) Chemical cycling: circulation of chemicals from environment-organism-environment
ResourcesExamples: defined by how quickly we can use them up or
how well nature can replenish them after we use them.Perpetual: Supply continuous; cannot be depleted on a human time scale. SolarPotentially renewable: takes several days to several hundred years to be replenished through natural processes. Soil, forests, freshwater, fish populations, fresh air. Highest rate at which they can be used is sustainable yield. Non-Renewable: Exist in a fixed quantity in earth’s crust; exhaustible. Geologic processes create these resources on a time scale of millions to billions of years. Fossil fuels, metallic mineral resources, non-metallic mineral resources.
II. Measuring Human Impact on the EnvironmentEcological Footprint: amount of biologically
productive land and water needed to provide the people in a particular country or area with an indefinite supply of renewable resources and to absorb and recycle wastes and pollution associated with resource use.
World Wildlife Fund (WWF) estimated that global ecol footprint exceeded earth’s biological capacity by 30%; we need 1.3 planets
William Rees and Mathis Wakernagel (developers of footprint model) estimate it would take 5 more planet Earths for the rest of the world to reach current U. S. levels of renewable resource consumption.
I = P x A x TIn most less-developed countries key
factors are population and degradation of resources
In more-developed countries it is over consumption
Ecological Footprint: a measure of how much a person consumes, expressed in are of land (often hectares/person or number of planets
Developed vs. Developing Countries
Fig. 1-14, p. 20
Tragedy of the Commons: Overexploiting Shared Renewable Resources
Private property: individuals or companies own rights to land, minerals or other resources
Common property: rights to certain resources are held by large groups or individuals
Open-access renewable resources: owned by no one and available for use by anyone at little or no charge.
Garrett Hardin 1968 outlined the misuse of open-access resources
Solutions: 1) use resource at a rate well below sustainable yield or 2) convert to private ownership
Living in an Exponential Age
Linear Vs. Exponential GrowthLinear-Quantity
increases by a constant amount per unit of time. Ex. 1,2,3,4,5
Exponential-Quantity increases by a fixed percent of whole in a given time-increase is proportional to what is already there.
Doubling time and the Rule of 70.
To find doubling time of a quantity growing at a given annual percentage rate, divide percentage into 70.Examples:
• $100 invested at a rate of 5% = doubling time
70/ 5% = 20 year double time• Population of 1 million growing at a rate of 3% =
___ DT70/ 3% = 23.3
To get annual growth rate, divide 70 by doubling time
• Oil consumption doubles every 50 years = rate of growth
70/50-1.4%
Percent Change Percent Change-increase or decrease-can be calculated using the following formula:
Change in Quantity X 100% Original QuantityExample: You consumed 800 gallons of gas in 2006 and 1200 gallons in 2007. What is the percent of increase in your gasoline consumption?
If gasoline is $3.00/gallon how much more did you spend on gas?
Example: A deer population goes from 1000-3000- what is the percent change?
1200$13$400 gal
gal
%501005.800/4001200800 X
%2001001000/200030001000 X
Scientific Notation and Dimensional Analysis
The study of Environmental Science involves analysis of data, and making conclusions about environmental impact based on calculations with that data. You will NOT be allowed to use calculators on unit problems, tests, or the national exam and should practice using scientific notation and utilizing dimensional analysis to convert units.
Example: Your car gets 20 mpg and you drive 40,000 miles. How many gallons of gas have you burned?
4 x 104 miles 1 gallon = 4 x 104 = 2 x 103 gallons 2.0 x 101 miles 2 x 101
OR 2000 gallons
III. The Scientific MethodExperimental Design: Experimental Group,
Control Group, Variables, Sample Size, Repeated Trials
Null Hypothesis: a statement or idea that can be falsified, or proven wrong
Inductive Reasoning: making general statements from specific facts or examples.
Deductive Reasoning: applying a general statement to specific facts or situations
HHMI: Changing Planet: Past, Present, Future-Lecture 4/Chapter 15
http://media.hhmi.org/hl/12Lect4.html
Environmental Science Presents Unique ChallengesLack of baseline data
Subjectivity
Interactions
Human Well-Being