Land Use in the World - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Land Use in the World

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Dodo Bird. Zebra Mussel. Threats from Nonnative Species. Strategies for. Protecting. Biodiversity ... Bird Success Stories. California Condor. Whooping Crane ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Land Use in the World


1
Land Use in the World
2
Land Use in the United States
3
U.S. Public Lands
4
Managing U.S. Public Lands
  • Management ethics
  • Economic
  • Balanced multiple use
  • Ecological
  • Preservationist

5
Changing Management
  • Through late-1800s economic
  • Developed to maximize use and profit
  • Sold to homesteaders, railroads,
  • timber and mining companies

6
Changing Management
  • Late-1800s balanced multiple use
  • Use in several ways, but manage
  • properly so resource is not damaged
  • Maximum sustained yield
  • Set aside forest reserves to ensure
  • adequate timber supply, protect
  • river watersheds

7
Changing Management
  • Also late-1800s ecological
  • Use it, but emphasize maintaining
  • natural aspects (plants, animals)
  • 1872 lands set aside for eventual 1st
  • national park - Yellowstone
  • Ethic supported greatly by U.S.
  • President Theodore Roosevelt

8
Changing Management
  • Throughout 1900s preservationist
  • No development, leave as is for future
  • Aldo Leopold, WI conservationist
  • 1964 National Wilderness Act (4)
  • - lands set aside, retained in natural
  • state, no development unless for the
  • national good

9
Todays Management
  • Most lands managed according to
  • balanced multiple use or ecological
  • ethics
  • - e.g. U.S. Forest Service
  • Bureau of Land Management
  • Public lands still facing many problems

10
Conflicting Demands
Mineral Resources
11
Wilderness Problems
  • Suffering from overuse
  • Limited entry in many areas
  • Timber, mining companies want
  • access to resources
  • For the national good

12
Park Problems
  • Severe overuse
  • Billions of visitors each year
  • Cars, noise, pollution, litter, crime
  • Conflicts between providing for
  • visitor enjoyment and still
  • conserving resources

13
Forest Problems
  • Conflicting demands
  • Timber, grazing, recreation, mining,
  • ecology
  • Ecological benefits air cleaning,
  • erosion control, oxygen, soil fertility,
  • water recycling, wildlife shelter
  • Exceeding maximum sustained yield
  • in many areas

14
Rangeland Problems
  • Overgrazing
  • Too many on too little for too long
  • Kills grass root systems
  • When combined with drought,
  • overgrazing can cause desertification
  • - conversion to desert

15
Degradation of Tropical Forests
16
Tropical Deforestation
  • Rapid and increasing
  • Loss of biodiversity
  • Cultural extinction
  • Unsustainable agriculture and ranching
  • Clearing for cash crop plantations
  • Commercial logging
  • Fuelwood

17
Wildlife Resources
  • What is happening to the wildlife
  • and plant resources around us today?

18
U.S. Species Diversity
19
Decreasing Biodiversity
  • 10-20 of species alive in 1975 were
  • extinct in 2000
  • Mostly plants, invertebrates in tropical
  • rain forests (many undescribed species)
  • 40 of all species live in tropical areas
  • Disappear along with forests

20
Extinction Not New
  • 99 of all species have gone extinct
  • Gradual environmental changes have
  • been responsible for most extinctions
  • Rapid environmental changes from
  • asteroids, etc. also have been important
  • in many extinctions

21
Extinction Rates
  • Background (natural) rate of extinction
  • Massextinction

22
Why Should We Care About Extinctions and
Biodiversity?
1) economics 2) aesthetics 3)
ecological 4) ethics
23
Causes of Premature Extinction of Wild Species

24
Habitat Disturbance and Destruction
California Condor
25
Commercial Hunting
Black Rhino
Range in 1700
Range today (about 2,400 left)
26
Predator and Pest Control
African Elephant
Probable range 1600
Range today (300,000 left)
27
Collecting for Pets, Zoos, Research
28
Pollution
Bald Eagle - DDT
29
Species Introductions
Dodo Bird
Zebra Mussel
30
Threats from Nonnative Species
31
Strategies for Protecting Biodiversity
  • Species approach
  • Ecosystem approach

32
The Species Approach Legal Means
  • International Treaties CITES
  • - Convention on International Trade in
  • Endangered Species
  • National Laws ESA- Endangered Species Act

33
The Species Approach The Sanctuary
  • Wildlife refuges and protected areas
  • - e.g. whooping cranes
  • Gene banks, botanical gardens, and farms
  • Zoos and Aquariums
  • - captive breeding programs

34
The Ecosystem Approach
  • Biosphere reserves
  • U.S. has gt30 reserves
  • - Yellowstone National Park
  • - Great Smoky Mtns. National Park
  • Other countries have similar reserves

35
Bird Success Stories
California Condor
Whooping Crane
Peregrine Falcon
Canada Goose
Wild Turkey
36
Economics and the Environment
  • Sustaining economic growth?

- Is growth necessary for progress?
- Limited natural resources
- Limited capacity to deal with wastes
37
Directed Economic Growth
  • Identify different forms of growth
  • with cost-benefit analyses
  • Environmentally good (GDP)
  • Environmentally bad (GDP)
  • Redirect growth

38
Redirecting Economic Growth
  • Reduce polluting growth, and growth
  • dependent on nonrenewable resources
  • Encourage clean and efficient
  • growth, and growth dependent on
  • renewable resources

39
Harmful External Costs and Full-Cost Pricing
  • External costs - need to eliminate
  • waste in the economy
  • Full-cost pricing - pay true cost for
  • goods and services
  • - recycling fee and pollution
  • tax to cost of new tires, oil
  • changes

40
Politics
  • Orderly distribution of resources
  • Political systems designed to
  • accomplish this goal

41
United States Political System
  • Legislative enact laws to ensure
  • equitable distribution of resources
  • Clean Air Water Acts, Water
  • Pollution Control Act, RCRA,
  • Endangered Species Act, National
  • Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)

42
NEPA
  • Environmental impact statement
  • Short- and long-term effects of
  • project on the environment
  • Examine alternatives

43
United States Political System
  • Executive enforce the laws
  • Environmental Protection Agency
  • (EPA)
  • Enforce environmental regulations
  • Distribute federal money for
  • environmental purposes (Superfund)

44
United States Political System
  • Judicial interpreting the laws
  • Environmental law
  • - Who speaks for the trees?

The Lorax
45
Environmental Policy in theUnited States
46
Factors Hindering Democracies in Dealing with
Environmental Problems
  • Lack of long-range planning
  • (usually focus on short-term issues)
  • Special interest groups have too much
  • influence
  • Too much bureaucracy

47
Factors Hindering Democracies in Dealing with
Environmental Problems
  • Reactive to problems instead of proactive
  • Major affected groups do not vote no obligation
    on the part of politicians
  • Elected officials spend too much time raising
    money to be reelected

48
Religion and the Environment
  • Most environmental degradation has been
  • the result of human attitudes and values.
  • Self-centered view of nature

49
Religion and the Environment
  • All major religions emphasize humans as
  • a part of nature
  • Steward of nature
  • A steward is a caretaker

50
Religion and the Environment
  • Most people do not practice their religious or
    philosophical beliefs when it relates to the
    environment (not acting as stewards)
  • Human population growth
  • Resource problems
  • Pollution problems
  • More emphasis is being placed on environmental
    concerns now by the worlds religious leaders.

51
Ecological Crisis?
  • Gloom and doom?
  • Technological optimism?
  • Good old days?
  • An important beginning
  • Lots more to accomplish
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