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Safeguarding Freshwater Ecosystems

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Safeguarding Freshwater Ecosystems Chapter 3 Freshwater Ecosystem Earth s hydrological system is a huge asset that is being destroyed by human actions. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Safeguarding Freshwater Ecosystems


1
Safeguarding Freshwater Ecosystems
  • Chapter 3

2
Freshwater Ecosystem
  • Earths hydrological system is a huge asset that
    is being destroyed by human actions.
  • Rivers, lakes , and other freshwater sources work
    with forests, grasslands, and other landscapes to
    provide goods and services of great importance to
    human society.
  • More than 90 of the worlds irrigation,
    industrial, and household water supplies comes
    from rivers, lakes, and aquifers.
  • Healthy rivers are vital for all life.

3
Assessing the Damage
  • Overstressed and deteriorating ecosystems take
    many forms such as disappearing species,
    decimated fish populations, falling water tables,
    altered river flows, shrinking lakes, diminishing
    wetlands, declining water quality, and pollution
    introduced dead zones.
  • All of these are getting worse.
  • The redirection of rivers causes the shrinkage of
    seas.
  • The spawning habitats for fish and shrimp are
    shrinking causing a decline in the fish and
    shrimp.

4
Healthy Watersheds for Safe Drinking Water
  • Forests and wetlands are natures way of providing
    high-quality water at a lower cost.
  • Many cities have begun protecting their
    watersheds, rather than building expensive water
    filtration systems.
  • Watersheds are more efficient.
  • Urban cities waste 20-50 of their usable water
    in leaks.
  • Cities who have saved their watersheds and
    avoided building water purification systems, have
    saved their people millions of dollars.

5
Food Security with Ecosystem Security
  • Already as much as 10 of global food production
    depends on the over pumping of ground water and
    closer to 25 in India.
  • The hydrological deficits create a bubble in food
    economy and is bound to burst.
  • Where will the additional water come from to
    support the growth of future food production?
  • Expected growth of 1.7 billion diets by 2030
  • The production of rice is key to help maintain
    balance.
  • Rice farmers can use much less water than
    currently used and still obtain large yields.

6
Reducing Risks, Preserving Resilience
  • Natural disasters may not be natural after all.
  • The depletion of wetlands and the clearing of
    trees greatly reduces the buffer from many of
    these storms.
  • Storms, floods, earthquakes, and tidal waves are
    natural events, but the degree to which they
    produce disastrous outcomes is now often strongly
    influenced by human actions.
  • By investing in watersheds, wetlands, and
    floodplains, many countries are helping their
    cause against these devastating occurrences.

7
Bringing Water Policies into the Twenty-first
Century
  • Signs of water scarcity and ecosystem disruption
    are pervasive and spreading, yet policies
    continue to promote inefficient, unproductive,
    and ecologically harmful practices.
  • These realities show the need for an overhaul of
    water policies.
  • South Africa leads the way in water management.
  • Water allocation plan to meet basic needs.
  • Water allocation plan to support ecosystem
    functions.
  • Many countries have followed South Africas lead.
  • Leadership, commitment, and citizen involvement
    are the driving forces behind many of the most
    innovative and successful water and policy
    reforms.
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