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Environmental Science PowerPoint Lecture

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Environmental Science PowerPoint Lecture Principles of Environmental Science - Inquiry and Applications, 2nd Edition, 2004 by William and Mary Ann Cunningham – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Science PowerPoint Lecture


1
Environmental Science PowerPoint Lecture
Principles of Environmental Science - Inquiry and
Applications, 2nd Edition, 2004 by William and
Mary Ann Cunningham
2
Chapter 6 - Topics
  • World Forests
  • Rangelands
  • Parks and Nature Preserves
  • World Parks and Preserves
  • Wilderness Areas and Wildlife Refuges

3
Where collect forest products? Where forests
located globally?
HERE?
Human Disturbance Map
4
FAO 1999,WRI 1998-1999
GLOBE
Forests, woodlands 33 land area
Ice, rock, desert etc. 32
Range, Pastures 23
Ag 10
66 area in RESOURCE EXTRACTION
Built land 2
5
Who imports wood, who cuts trees?
Oceania
Europe
3
4
Asia
South America
14
25
15
Africa
24
16
Former USSR
North/ Central America
of Total Area in Forests Globally
6
Main vegetation zones of the worlds forests
under natural conditions
7
Part 1 World Forests

70-80 of original

30 of original
8
Global Wood Use ,
86
51
49
14
9
World Consumption, 1994 ( of total)
Fuelwood Fiber paper products Non-fiber roundwood
Asia 93 1 6
Africa 81 6 13
South Am 50 31 19
former USSR 44 17 39
N/Cen Am 21 37 41
Europe 15 33 52
Oceania 7 14 79
TOTAL 56 18 25
10
DEFORESTATION Charcoal production Northern
Brazil
11
Outside New Delhi, India houses made of cow
piles
12
Himalayas - India
Collecting leaves for fodder
Harvesting resin
13
Forest Products
14
India Himalayas cutting trees for fire wood
15
Manikara zapota (chicle), Belize
16
Wood Consumption
  • Total annual world wood consumption is about 3.7
    billion metric tons, more then steel and plastic
    consumption together.
  • Firewood accounts for slightly more than 50 of
    all wood harvested worldwide.
  • Developed countries produce less than half of all
    wood used for industrial purposes, but account
    for about 80 of its consumption.
  • By 2025, demand for fuelwood may be twice the
    available supply.

17
  • About 25 of the worlds forests are managed for
    wood production.
  • Monoculture forestry - single species
  • Ideal scientific planning for sustainable
    harvests

18
Some Causes of Tropical Deforestation
  • Logging for valuable hardwoods such as mahogany
  • Clearing of land for cattle ranches and export
    crop production (bananas, pineapples, palm oil
    plantations etc.)
  • Slash and burn agriculture this is listed by
    the text but is such a different level that it
    should not be included in this list
  • Mining - gold

19
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20
Tropical Forest Issues
Estimated rate of tropical forest losses
21
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22
North Brazil
23
Malaysia, palm oil
24
DEFORESTATION Valued timber species - Indonesia
25
Cutting and burning of tropical rainforest
results in
  • Wildlife loss, over hunting
  • Habitat loss, species changes
  • Rapid water runoff
  • Soil erosion
  • Waste forest resources
  • Climate change other parts of world (Amazon)

26
Logging roads open up forest access to landless
settlers
27
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28
  • Forest acres in USA between 1600 1992 (decrease
    46 to 32)

29
Temperate Forest Issues
  • Logging of old-growth
  • Endangered species vs. jobs
  • Northern spotted owl
  • Salmon
  • Natural resource extractive economies rural
    environments

30
Driving negative reactions to forest management
  • Clear-cutting
  • Use of single species in monocultures
  • Road construction to harvest forests

31
Clear-cutting and Road Building
32
Fire Management and Forest Health
33
Solutions to Decrease Forest Loss Rates
  • Forest Certification
  • Forest Protection (12 of forests protected
    globally)
  • Integrated Conservation and Sustainable
    Development projects
  • Debt-for-Nature Swaps (1st in Bolivia)

34
Rationales for Certification
  • Social movement in tropics
  • Dislike of past land practices
  • Mistrust of landowners
  • Disjunction between production and consumers

35
Why Consider Forest Certification?
  • Public concern over globalization
  • Public want more values/land
  • Supply chain increasingly scrutinized
  • Retailers prefer credible suppliers
  • Consolidation strengthens buyers
  • Non-Tariff trade barriers will increase
  • Global markets impact US markets
  • Gain market share and efficiency
  • Improve market prices and stability
  • Increase industry profitability
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