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Humans in the Biosphere

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Title: Humans in the Biosphere


1
Humans in the Biosphere
  • Earth as an Island-
  • 1. all organisms that live on Earth share
    limited resource base

2. Understanding how humans interact is crucial
to protecting resources
The iiwi (Hawaiian honeycreeper), a native
species in Hawaii is becoming scarce due to
disease, habitat loss, and predation by
introduced species
2
B. Human Activities
1. Industry and Technology give humans
advantage in competing with other species for
limited resources such as food, energy, and space
2. Today, humans most important source for
environmental change
a. Hunting and Gathering-have changed
environment since pre-historic times
Human hunters arrived in North America about
12,000 years ago. They caused one of major mass
extinctions of large animals (woolly mammoths,
giant ground sloths, saber tooth cats, cheetahs,
zebras, etc.)
3
3). Green Revolution- global effort to
increase food production for fast- growing
world population (new, intensive farming
practices that increase yields)
4
  1. Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources

1. Two types of environmental resources
a. Renewable- can regenerate (are
replaceable) not necessarily unlimited
b. nonrenewable- one that cannot be
replenished by natural processes (eg. Fossil
fuels, oil and natural gas
2. Sustainable use- using natural resources
so that you dont deplete them (based on
principles of ecology and economics)
5
3. Land Resources- provides space for cities,
materials for industry, soils in which crops are
grown.
desertification- in certain parts of the world
with dry climates, a combination of farming,
overgrazing, and drought have turned once
productive areas into deserts
6
4. Forest Resources- provides products,
habitats and food for organisms, moderates
climate, limits soil erosion, protects
freshwater supplies, lungs of the Earth
deforestation- loss of forest. Can lead to
severe erosion. Sustainable-use strategies
include selective harvesting and replanting.
7
5. Ocean Resources- provides valuable food
resources.

How do you explain graph 2 (fish catch per
person remains the same despite steady increase
in world fish catch)?
8
6. Air Resources- Air is common resource.
Preserving air quality remains a challenge for
modern society.
a. Smog- common pollutant in large cities.
(pollutant- harmful material that can enter the
biosphere through land, air, or water)
9
b. Acid rain- acidic gasses released into
air and combine with water vapor forming drops
of nitric and sulfuric acid. Can kill plants,
change chemistry of soils and standing water
ecosystems
Photomicrograph of drop of acid rain. Serious
threat to environment
10
7. Water Resources- water is renewable resource
but must be protected because supply is limited.
a. Water pollution- threatened by chemicals,
domestic sewage, wastes discarded on land- all
can seep into underground water supplies.
City sewage must be treated in sewage-treatment
plants. Organic wastes are broken down by
bacteria and then chemicals are added to kill
harmful microorganisms.
11
D. Biodiversity- sum total of the genetically
based variety of all organisms in the biosphere
1. Forms of diversity
a. Ecosystem diversity- includes variety of
habitats, communities, and ecological processes
in the living world
b. Species diversity- number of different
species in the biosphere
c. Genetic diversity- sum total of all the
different forms of genetic information carried by
all living organisms
12
2. Biodiversity is one of Earths greatest
natural resources. Species of many kinds have
provided us with foods, industrial products,
medicines, etc.
3. Threats to Biodiversity- human activity can
reduce biodiversity by altering habitats, hunting
species to extinction, introducing toxic
compounds into food webs, and introducing foreign
species into new environments
13
a. Pollution- many forms of pollution can
affect biodiversity.
Biological magnification- concentrations of
harmful substances increase in organisms at
higher trophic levels. Affects all levels, but
top-level carnivore are at highest risk
By what number is the concentration of DDT
multiplied at each successive trophic level?
14
b. Introduced Species- one of most important
threats. Introduced either intentionally or
unintentionally they have destroyed habitats of
species native to those ecosystems.
Fire ants were accidentally imported from Brazil
about 45 years ago. Now found in San Clemente
15
4. Conserving Biodiversity- many conservation
efforts focusing on entire ecosystems as well as
single species
16
D. Charting a Course for the Future- two major
concerns
1. Ozone depletion- naturally occurring ozone
gas (20-50 km above Earths surface) absorbs good
deal of harmful ultraviolet radiation from
sunlight before it reaches Earths surface.
a. Beginning in 1970s scientists found evidence
showing ozone hole over Antarctica
17
b. Problem caused by compounds called
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) (CFCs act as
catalysts that enable UV light to break apart
ozone
18
2. Global Warming- an increase in average
temperature of the biosphere.
a. Hypothesize that human activities have added
carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses
(methane, H20) into the atmosphere
b. Scientific models suggest that could cause
polar ice caps to melt and raise sea level. This
could also cause more severe weather disturbances
19
D. The Value of a Healthy Biosphere
1. Human society depends on healthy, diverse,
and productive ecosystems because of the
environmental and economic benefits they provide
2. People need to make wise choices in use of
resources and disposal or recycling of materials
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