Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
AP® EDITION Environment The Science Behind the Stories 5TH EDITION Jay Withgott Matthew Laposata Boston Columbus Indianapolis New York San Francisco Upper Saddle River Amsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montréal Toronto Delhi Mexico City São Paulo Sydney Hong Kong Seoul Singapore Taipei Tokyo A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 1 12/07/13 2:08 PM Editor-in-Chief: Beth Wilbur Executive Director of Development: Deborah Gale Acquisitions Editor: Alison Rodal Project/Development Editor: Anna Amato Editorial Assistant: Libby Reiser Associate Media Producer: Daniel Ross Marketing Manager: Amee Mosley Managing Editor: Michael Early Project Manager: Shannon Tozier Production Management: Kelly Keeler, Cenveo Publishers, Inc. Compositor: Cenveo Publishers, Inc. Illustrators: Imagineeringart.com Inc. Design Manager: Derek Bacchus Interior and Cover Designer: Tandem Creative, Inc. Text Permissions Project Manager: Joseph Croscup and Michael Farmer Text Permissions Specialist: Electronic Publishing Services Photo Editor: Travis Amos Photo Permissions Management: Q2A/Bill Smith Photo Researcher: Zoe Milgram, Q2A/Bill Smith Manufacturing Buyer: Jeffery Sargent Text Printer: R.R. Donnelley/Willard Cover Printer: Lehigh-Phoenix Color/Hagerstown Cover Photo Credit: mark ferguson/Alamy Credits and acknowledgments for materials borrowed from other sources and reproduced, with permission, in this textbook appear on the appropriate page within the text or on page CR-1. Copyright © 2014, 2011, 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. To obtain permission(s) to use material from this work, please submit a written request to Pearson Education, Inc., Permissions Department, 1900 E. Lake Ave., Glenview, IL 60025. For information regarding permissions, call (847) 486-2635. Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book, and the publisher was aware of a trademark claim, the designations have been printed in initial caps or all caps. MasteringEnvironmentalScience® is a trademark, in the U.S. and/or other countries, of Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. AP® is a trademark registered and/or owned by the College Board, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, this product. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Withgott, Jay. Environment : the science behind the stories / Jay Withgott, Matt Laposata. -- Fifth edition. pages cm Previous editions cataloged under Brennan, Scott Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-321-89742-8 1. Environmental sciences. I. Title. GE105.B74 2013 363.7-- dc23 2013004851 ISBN 10: 0-13-354014-6 (High School Binding) ISBN 13: 978-0-13-354014-7 (High School Binding) PearsonSchool.com/Advanced A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10—RRD—17 16 15 14 13 12/07/13 2:08 PM About the Authors Jay Withgott has authored Environment: The Science behind the Stories as well as its brief version, Essential Environment, since their inception. In dedicating himself to these books, he works to keep abreast of a diverse and rapidly changing field and continually seeks to develop new and better ways to help today’s students learn environmental science. As a researcher, Jay has published scientific papers in ecology, evolution, animal behavior, and conservation biology in journals ranging from Evolution to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. As an instructor, he has taught university lab courses in ecology and other disciplines. As a science writer, he has authored articles for numerous journals and magazines including Science, New Scientist, BioScience, Smithsonian, and Natural History. By combining his scientific training with prior experience as a newspaper reporter and editor, he strives to make science accessible and engaging for general audiences. Jay holds degrees from Yale University, the University of Arkansas, and the University of Arizona. Jay lives with his wife, biologist Susan Masta, in Portland, Oregon. Matthew Laposata is a professor of environmental science at Kennesaw State University (KSU). He holds a bachelor’s degree in biology education from Indiana University of Pennsylvania, a master’s degree in biology from Bowling Green State University, and a doctorate in ecology from The Pennsylvania State University. Matt is the coordinator of KSU’s two-semester general education science sequence titled Science, Society, and the Environment, which enrolls roughly 6000 students per year. He focuses exclusively on introductory environmental science courses and has enjoyed teaching and interacting with thousands of nonscience majors during his career. He is an active scholar in environmental science education and has received grants from state, federal, and private sources to develop and evaluate innovative curricular materials. His scholarly work has received numerous awards, including the Georgia Board of Regents’ highest award for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning. Matt resides in suburban Atlanta with his wife, Lisa, and children, Lauren, Cameron, and Saffron. ABOUT OUR SUSTAINABILITY INITIATIVES This book is carefully crafted to minimize environmental impact. The materials used to manufacture this book originated from sources committed to responsible forestry practices. The paper is Forest Stewardship Council™ (FSC®) certified. The printing, binding, cover, and paper come from facilities that minimize waste, energy consumption, and the use of harmful chemicals. Pearson closes the loop by recycling every out-of-date text returned to our warehouse. We pulp the books, and the pulp is used to produce items such as paper coffee cups and shopping bags. In addition, Pearson has become the first climate-neutral educational publishing company. The future holds great promise for reducing our impact on Earth’s environment, and Pearson is proud to be leading the way. We strive to publish the best books with the most up-to-date and accurate content, and to do so in ways that minimize our environmental impact. iii A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 3 12/07/13 2:08 PM Brief Contents Part ONE Foundations of Environmental Science 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 S cience and Sustainability: An Introduction to Environmental Science 2 Earth’s Physical Systems: Matter, Energy, and Geology 21 Evolution, Biodiversity, and Population Ecology 47 Species Interactions and Community Ecology 74 Environmental Systems and Ecosystem Ecology 104 Ethics, Economics, and Sustainable Development 132 Environmental Policy: Making Decisions and Solving Problems 161 PART TWO Environmental Issues and the Search for Solutions 187 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 iv Human Population 188 Soil and Agriculture 214 Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future of Food 243 Biodiversity and Conservation Biology 274 Forests, Forest Management, and Protected Areas 306 The Urban Environment: Creating Sustainable Cities 335 Environmental Health and Toxicology 358 Freshwater Systems and Resources 388 Marine and Coastal Systems and Resources 419 Atmospheric Science, Air Quality, and Pollution Control 448 Global Climate Change 482 Fossil Fuels, Their Impacts, and Energy Conservation 518 Conventional Energy Alternatives 552 New Renewable Energy Alternatives 580 Managing Our Waste 608 Minerals and Mining 633 Sustainable Solutions 653 Appendix A: Answers to Data Analysis Questions A-1 Appendix B: How to Interpret Graphs B-1 Appendix C: Metric System C-1 Appendix D: Periodic Table of the Elements D-1 Appendix E: Geologic Time Scale E-1 Glossary G-1 Credits CR-1 Selected Sources and References for Further Reading R-1 Index I-1 A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 4 12/07/13 2:08 PM Contents Geology: The Physical Basis for Environmental Science33 P art O ne The Science Behind the Story: Have We Brought On a New Geologic Epoch? 38 Geologic and Natural Hazards39 3 Evolution, Biodiversity, and Population Ecology47 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Saving Hawaii’s Native Forest Birds Foundations of Environmental Science 48 Evolution: The Source of Earth’s Biodiversity49 1 Science and Sustainability: An Introduction to Environmental Science2 Our Island, Earth3 The Nature of Environmental Science 5 The Science Behind the Story: What Are the Lessons of Easter Island? The Nature of Science Sustainability and Our Future 2 6 9 14 Earth’s Physical Systems: Matter, Energy, and Geology21 The Science Behind the Story: Monitoring Bird Populations at Hakalau Forest Conserving Biodiversity 4 64 69 Species Interactions and Community Ecology74 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Black and White, and Spread All Over: Zebra Mussels Invade the Great Lakes 75 Species Interactions76 Ecological Communities80 CENTRAL CASE STUDY The Tohoku Earthquake: Has It Shaken the World’s Trust in Nuclear Power? The Science Behind the Story: Hawaii: Species Factory and Lab of Evolution 56 Levels of Ecological Organization60 Population Ecology61 22 The Science Behind the Story: Tracking Fukushima’s Nuclear Legacy 26 Energy: An Introduction29 The Science Behind the Story: Chronicling Ecological Recovery at Mount St. Helens Earth’s Biomes 86 90 93 CONTENTS Matter, Chemistry, and the Environment23 The Science Behind the Story: Determining Zebra Mussels’ Impacts on Fish Communities v A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 5 12/07/13 2:08 PM 5 E nvironmental Systems and Ecosystem Ecology104 CENTRAL CASE STUDY The Vanishing Oysters of the Chesapeake Bay International Environmental Policy178 Approaches to Environmental Policy180 P art T W O 105 Earth’s Environmental Systems106 Ecosystems110 Biogeochemical Cycles117 6 The Science Behind the Story: “Turning the Tide” for Native Oysters in Chesapeake Bay 118 The Science Behind the Story: FACE-ing a High-CO2 Future 124 E thics, Economics, and Sustainable Development132 Environmental Issues and the Search for Solutions 8 CENTRAL CASE STUDY CENTRAL CASE STUDY Costa Rica Values Its Ecosystem Services China’s One-Child Policy 189 133 Culture, Worldview, and the Environment134 Environmental Ethics135 Economics and the Environment141 The Science Behind the Story: Do Payments Help Preserve Forest? Human Population188 144 The Science Behind the Story: Ethics in Economics: Discounting and Global Climate Change 148 Sustainable Development156 Our World at Seven Billion 190 The Science Behind the Story: Mapping Our Population’s Environmental Impact 194 Demography 196 Population and Society202 The Science Behind the Story: Did Soap Operas Reduce Fertility in Brazil? 9 204 Soil and Agriculture214 CENTRAL CASE STUDY 7 E nvironmental Policy: Making Decisions and Solving Problems161 215 162 Soil: The Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture216 Soil as a System218 Conserving Soil222 Environmental Policy: An Overview 164 The Science Behind the Story: Can No-Till Farming Help Us Fight Climate Change? 230 Watering and Fertilizing Crops232 The Science Behind the Story: Does Fracking Contaminate Drinking Water? U.S. Environmental Law and Policy 166 169 The Science Behind the Story: Restoring the Malpai Borderlands 234 Agricultural Policy237 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Hydrofracking the Marcellus Shale vi Iowa’s Farmers Practice No-Till Agriculture A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 6 12/07/13 2:08 PM 10 Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future of Food243 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Transgenic Maize in Southern Mexico? 244 The Race to Feed the World245 Raising Animals for Food 249 Preserving Crop Diversity252 Conserving Pollinators, Controlling Pests254 Organic Agriculture257 Forest Ecosystems and Forest Resources308 Forest Loss311 Forest Management314 Parks and Protected Areas323 The Science Behind the Story: Fighting over Fire and Forests 324 The Science Behind the Story: Forest Fragmentation in the Amazon 330 13 The Science Behind the Story: How Productive Is Organic Farming? 258 Genetically Modified Food261 The Science Behind the Story: Transgenic Contamination of Native Maize? 266 Sustainable Food Production 268 11 Biodiversity and Conservation Biology274 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Will We Slice through the Serengeti? The Science Behind the Story: Wildlife Declines in African Reserves 286 Benefits of Biodiversity290 Conservation Biology: The Search for Solutions 294 12 300 Forests, Forest Management, and Protected Areas306 A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 7 Managing Growth in Portland, Oregon 336 Our Urbanizing World337 Sprawl339 Creating Livable Cities342 Urban Sustainability350 The Science Behind the Story: Baltimore and Phoenix Showcase Urban Ecology 352 307 14 Environmental Health and Toxicology358 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Poison in the Bottle: Is Bisphenol A Safe? Environmental Health 359 360 The Science Behind the Story: Testing the Safety of Bisphenol A 362 Toxic Substances and Their Effects on Organisms367 Toxic Substances and Their Effects on Ecosystems372 Studying Effects of Hazards374 The Science Behind the Story: Pesticides and Child Development in Mexico’s Yaqui Valley 378 Risk Assessment and Risk Management380 Philosophical and Policy Approaches382 CONTENTS CENTRAL CASE STUDY Certified Sustainable Paper in Your Textbook CENTRAL CASE STUDY 275 Our Planet of Life 276 Extinction and Biodiversity Loss281 The Science Behind the Story: Using Forensics to Uncover Illegal Whaling The Urban Environment: Creating Sustainable Cities335 vii 12/07/13 2:08 PM 15 Freshwater Systems and Resources388 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Starving the Louisiana Coast of Sediment 389 Freshwater Systems391 Human Activities Affect Waterways 396 Ozone Depletion and Recovery The Science Behind the Story: Discovering Ozone Depletion and the Substances Behind It 470 Addressing Acid Deposition 473 Indoor Air Quality475 18 16 410 Marine and Coastal Systems and Resources419 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Collapse of the Cod Fisheries Rising Seas May Flood the Maldives The Science Behind the Story: Reading History in the World’s Longest Ice Core 490 Current and Future Trends and Impacts492 The Science Behind the Story: How Do Climate Models Work? 494 Responding to Climate Change507 420 The Oceans421 Marine and Coastal Ecosystems426 The Science Behind the Story: Will Climate Change Rob Us of Coral Reefs? 428 Marine Pollution 432 The Science Behind the Story: Predicting the Oceans’ “Garbage Patches” 434 Emptying the Oceans437 Marine Conservation443 Atmospheric Science, Air Quality, and Pollution Control448 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Clearing the Air in L.A. and Mexico City 449 The Atmosphere450 Outdoor Air Quality456 viii The Science Behind the Story: Measuring the Health Impacts of Mexico City’s Air Pollution A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 8 483 Our Dynamic Climate 484 Studying Climate Change488 19 17 Global Climate Change482 CENTRAL CASE STUDY The Science Behind the Story: Is It Better in a Bottle? 400 Solutions to Depletion of Fresh Water405 Freshwater Pollution and Its Control408 The Science Behind the Story: Hypoxia and the Gulf of Mexico’s “Dead Zone” 468 Fossil Fuels, Their Impacts, and Energy Conservation518 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Alberta’s Oil Sands and the Keystone XL Pipeline 519 Sources of Energy520 Fossil Fuels and Their Extraction524 The Science Behind the Story: Locating Fossil Fuel Deposits Underground 530 Addressing Impacts of Fossil Fuel Use536 The Science Behind the Story: Discovering Impacts of the Gulf Oil Spill 540 Energy Efficiency and Conservation546 20 Conventional Energy Alternatives552 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Sweden’s Search for Alternative Energy 553 466 12/07/13 2:08 PM Alternatives to Fossil Fuels554 Nuclear Power555 23 Minerals and Mining633 CENTRAL CASE STUDY The Science Behind the Story: Health Impacts of Chernobyl and Fukushima 562 Bioenergy566 The Science Behind the Story: Assessing EROI Values of Energy Sources 572 Hydroelectric Power574 21 New Renewable Energy Alternatives580 CENTRAL CASE STUDY Germany Goes Solar 581 Mining for . . . Cell Phones? 634 Earth’s Mineral Resources635 Mining Methods and Their Impacts639 The Science Behind the Story: Mountaintop Removal Mining: Assessing the Environmental Impacts 644 Toward Sustainable Mineral Use646 24 Sustainable Solutions653 CENTRAL CASE STUDY “New” Renewable Energy Sources582 The Science Behind the Story: Comparing Energy Sources 586 Solar Energy588 The Science Behind the Story: What Are the Impacts of Solar and Wind Development? 592 Wind Power594 Geothermal Energy598 Ocean Energy Sources600 Hydrogen602 De Anza College Strives for a Sustainable Campus 654 Sustainability on Campus655 Strategies for Sustainability665 Precious Time670 Appendix A Answers to Data Analysis Questions A-1 Appendix B 22 How to Interpret Graphs Managing Our Waste608 Transforming New York’s Fresh Kills Landfill Appendix C Metric System CENTRAL CASE STUDY B-1 C-1 Appendix D 609 Periodic Table of the Elements D-1 Appendix E Approaches to Waste Management Municipal Solid Waste 610 611 The Science Behind the Story: Tracking Trash 620 Industrial Solid Waste622 Hazardous Waste624 628 E-1 Glossary G-1 Credits CR-1 Selected Sources and References for Further Reading R-1 Index I-1 CONTENTS The Science Behind the Story: Testing the Toxicity of “E-Waste” Geologic Time Scale ix A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 9 12/07/13 2:08 PM Preface Dear AP Student, Dear AP Teacher, You are coming of age at a unique and momentous time in history. Within your lifetime, our global society must chart a promising course for a sustainable future. The stakes could not be higher. Today we live long lives enriched with astonishing technologies, in societies more free, just, and equal than ever before. We enjoy wealth on a scale our ancestors could hardly have dreamed of. Yet we have purchased these wonderful things at a price. By exploiting Earth’s resources and ecological services, we are depleting our planet’s bank account and running up its credit card. We are altering our planet’s land, air, water, nutrient cycles, biodiversity, and climate at dizzying speeds. More than ever before, the future of our society rests with how we treat the world around us. Your future is being shaped by the phenomena you will learn about in your environmental science course. Environmental science gives us a big-picture understanding of the world and our place within it. Environmental science also offers hope and solutions, revealing ways to address the problems we create. Environmental science is not simply some subject you learn in college. Rather, it provides you basic literacy in the foremost issues of the 21st century, and it relates to everything around you over your entire lifetime. We have written this book because today’s students will shape tomorrow’s world. At this unique moment in history, students of your generation are key to achieving a sustainable future for our civilization. The many environmental challenges that face us can seem overwhelming, but you should feel encouraged and motivated. Remember that each dilemma is also an opportunity. For every problem that human carelessness has created, human ingenuity can devise a solution. Now is the time for innovation, creativity, and the fresh perspectives that a new generation can offer. Your own ideas and energy will make a difference. You perform one of our society’s most vital jobs by educating today’s students—the citizens and leaders of tomorrow—on the fundamentals of the world around them, the nature of science, and the most central issues of our time. We have written this book to assist you in this endeavor because we feel that the crucial role of environmental science in today’s world makes it imperative to engage, educate, and inspire a broad audience of students. In Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, AP Edition, we strive to implement a diversity of modern teaching approaches and to show how science can inform efforts to bring about a sustainable society. We aim to encourage critical thinking and to maintain a balanced approach as we flesh out the vibrant social debate that accompanies environmental issues. As we assess the challenges facing our civilization and our planet, we focus on providing forward-looking solutions, for we truly feel there are many reasons for optimism. In crafting the fifth edition of this text, we have incorporated the most current information from this fast-moving field and have streamlined our presentation to promote learning. We have examined every line with care to make sure all content is accurate, clear, and up-to-date. Moreover, we have introduced a number of major changes that are new to this edition. –Jay Withgott and Matthew Laposata New to This Edition With the fifth edition we welcome Dr. Matthew Laposata as an author. Professor of environmental science at Kennesaw State University in Georgia, Matt teaches and coordinates his university’s environmental science courses while actively engaging in outside projects to promote environmental science education. Matt’s ideas, energy, and commitment to outstanding teaching have already enlivened and strengthened this book as well as its brief version, Essential Environment. Please welcome him to our author team! This fifth edition includes an array of revisions that together enhance our content and presentation while strengthening our commitment to teach science in an engaging and accessible way. x A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 10 CENTR AL C A S E S T UDY Ten of our 23 Central Case Studies are new to this edition, providing a wealth of fresh stories and new ways to frame issues in environmental science. Students will travel from Pennsylvania to Hawai‘i and from Africa to Japan as they learn how debates over hydraulic fracturing, oil sands extraction, air pollution, and wildlife conservation are affecting people’s lives. 12/07/13 2:08 PM • Chapter 2: The Tohoku Earthquake: Has it Shaken the World’s Trust in Nuclear Power? • Chapter 3: Saving Hawaii’s Native Forest Birds • Chapter 5: The Vanishing Oysters of the Chesapeake Bay • Chapter 6: Costa Rica Values its Ecosystem Services • Chapter 7: Hydrofracking the Marcellus Shale • Chapter 9: Iowa’s Farmers Practice No-Till Agriculture • Chapter 11: Will We Slice through the Serengeti? • Chapter 15: Starving the Louisiana Coast of Sediment • Chapter 17: Clearing the Air in L.A. and Mexico City • Chapter 19: Alberta’s Oil Sands and the Keystone XL Pipeline • Chapter 20: Health Impacts of Chernobyl and Fukushima • Chapter 20: Assessing EROI Values of Energy Sources • Chapter 21: Comparing Energy Sources • Chapter 21: What are the Impacts of Solar and Wind Development? new feature highlights questions frequently FAQ This posed by students in introductory environmental science courses. Some FAQs address widely held misconceptions, whereas others fill in common conceptual gaps in student knowledge. This feature addresses not only the questions students ask, but also the questions they sometimes hesitate to ask. In so doing, it shows students they are not alone in having these questions, and it helps to foster an environment of open inquiry in the classroom. THE SCIENCE BEHIND THE STORY A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 11 Each chapter now contains questions that help students to actively engage with graphs and other data-driven figures. The questions accompany several figures in each chapter, challenging students to practice quantitative skills of interpretation and analysis. To encourage students to test their understanding as they read, answers are provided in Appendix A. Currency and coverage of topical issues To live up to our book’s hard-won reputation for currency, we’ve incorporated the most recent data possible throughout, and we’ve enhanced coverage of issues now gaining prominence. As climate change and energy concerns play ever-larger roles in today’s world, our coverage has evolved. This edition highlights how renewable energy is growing, yet also how we continue reaching further for fossil fuels with deep offshore drilling, Arctic drilling, hydraulic fracturing for oil and shale gas, and extraction of oil sands. These choices make energy returned on investment (EROI) ratios crucially important, especially as climate change gathers force. Climate change connections continue to proliferate among topics throughout our text, and our climate change chapter includes new coverage of climate modeling, geoengineering, research into jet stream effects on extreme weather, impacts of Hurricane Sandy and other events, the latest climate predictions for the United States and the world, efforts toward carbon neutrality, and political responses at all levels. This edition also expands its coverage of a diversity of topics including the valuation of ecosystem services, introduced species and their ecological impacts on islands, prospects for nuclear power and safety after Fukushima, advanced biofuels, hormone-disrupting substances, impacts on coastal wetlands, plastic pollution in the oceans, environmental policy, ocean acidification, sustainable agriculture, green-collar jobs, and the rebound effect in energy conservation. We continue to use sustainability as an organizing theme throughout the book, and we aid these efforts by moving primary coverage of sustainable development to Chapter 6 and previewing Chapter 24’s campus sustainability coverage in Chapter 1. P R E FAC E Fully 18 of our 42 Science Behind the Story features are new to this edition, providing a current and exciting selection of scientific studies to highlight. Students will follow researchers as they help to restore an oyster fishery; monitor animal populations; evaluate energy sources; and assess impacts of smog, aquifer contamination, fallout from Fukushima, and oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill. Selected features are supported by new “Process of Science” exercises online in MasteringEnvironmentalScience that use these examples to help students explore how scientists conduct their work. • Chapter 2: Tracking Fukushima’s Nuclear Legacy • Chapter 3: Hawaii: Species Factory and Lab of Evolution • Chapter 3: Monitoring Bird Populations at Hakalau Forest • Chapter 4: Chronicling Ecological Recovery at Mount St. Helens • Chapter 5: “Turning the Tide” for Native Oysters in Chesapeake Bay • Chapter 6: Do Payments Help Preserve Forest? • Chapter 7: Does Fracking Contaminate Drinking Water? • Chapter 8: Did Soap Operas Reduce Fertility in Brazil? • Chapter 9: Can No-Till Farming Help Us Fight Climate Change? • Chapter 11: Wildlife Declines in African Reserves • Chapter 16: Predicting the Oceans’ “Garbage Patches” • Chapter 17: Measuring the Health Impacts of Mexico City’s Air Pollution • Chapter 18: How Do Climate Models Work? • Chapter 19: Discovering Impacts of the Gulf Oil Spill xi 12/07/13 2:08 PM Enhanced style elements We have updated and improved the look and clarity of our visual presentation throughout the text. A more open layout, more engaging photo treatments, improved maps in the case studies, and redesigned table styles all make the book more inviting and accessible for learning. This edition includes over 30% new photos, graphs, and illustrations, while existing figures have been revised to reflect current data or for better clarity or pedagogy. Existing Features We have also retained the major features that made the first four editions of our book unique and that are proving so successful in classrooms across North America: An emphasis on science and data analysis We have maintained and strengthened our commitment to a rigorous presentation of modern scientific research while at the same time making science clear, accessible, and engaging to students. Explaining and illustrating the process of science remains a foundational goal of this endeavor. We also continue to provide an abundance of clearly cited data-rich graphs, with accompanying tools for data analysis. In our text, our figures, and numerous print and online features, we aim to challenge students and to assist them with the vital skills of data analysis and interpretation. An emphasis on solutions For many students, today’s deluge of environmental dilemmas can lead them to believe that there is no hope or that they cannot personally make a difference in tackling these challenges. We have aimed to counter this impression by highlighting innovative solutions being developed around the world. While being careful not to paint too rosy a picture of the challenges that lie ahead, we demonstrate that there is ample reason for optimism, and we encourage action. Our campus sustainability coverage (Chapters 1 and 24) shows students how their peers are applying principles and lessons from environmental science to forge sustainable solutions on their own campuses. To recognize the efforts of faculty and students in encouraging sustainable practices on campus and in their communities, Pearson Education will continue to grant Sustainable Solutions Awards to exceptional campus programs. See www.masteringenvironmentalscience.com for entry details and for profiles of previous winners. Central Case Studies integrated throughout the text. We integrate each chapter’s Central Case Study into the main text, weaving information and elaboration throughout the chapter. In this way, compelling stories about real people and real places help to teach foundational concepts by giving students a tangible framework with which to incorporate novel ideas. We are gratified that students and teachers using our book have so consistently applauded this approach, and we hope it continues to bring further success in environmental science education. xii The Science Behind the Story Because we strive to engage students in the scientific process of testing and A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 12 discovery, we feature The Science Behind the Story boxes in each chapter. By guiding students through key research efforts, this feature shows not merely what scientists discovered, but how they discovered it. Weighing the Issues These questions aim to help develop the critical-thinking skills students need to navigate multifaceted issues at the juncture of science, policy, and ethics. They serve as stopping points for students to reflect on what they have read, wrestle with complex dilemmas, and engage in spirited classroom discussion. Diverse end-of-chapter features Reviewing Objectives summarizes each chapter’s main points and relates them to the chapter’s learning objectives, enabling students to confirm that they have understood the most crucial ideas and to review concepts by turning to specified page numbers. Testing Your Comprehension provides concise study questions on main topics, while Seeking Solutions encourages broader creative thinking aimed at finding solutions. “Think It Through” questions place students in a scenario and empower them to make decisions to resolve problems. Calculating Ecological Footprints enables students to quantify the impacts of their own choices and measure how individual impacts scale up to the societal level. MasteringEnvironmentalScience With this edition we are thrilled to offer expanded opportunities through MasteringEnvironmentalScience, our powerful yet easy-to-use online learning and assessment platform. We have developed new content and activities specifically to support features in the textbook, thus strengthening the connection between these online and print resources. This approach encourages students to practice their science literacy skills in an interactive environment with a diverse set of automatically graded exercises. Students benefit from self-paced activities that feature immediate wrong-answer feedback, while teachers can gauge student performance with informative diagnostics. By enabling assessment of student learning outside the classroom, MasteringEnvironmentalScience helps the teacher to maximize the impact of in-classroom time. As a result, both educators and students benefit from an integrated text and online solution. New to this edition Informed by teacher feedback and teachers, desires for students to leave their environmental science course with a mastery of science literacy skills, the following are additions to MasteringEnvironmentalScience. The first three were created specifically for the fifth edition by our textbook’s co-author Matthew Laposata: • Process of Science activities help students navigate the scientific method, guiding them through in-depth explorations of experimental design using Science Behind the Story features from the fifth edition. These activities encourage students to think like a scientist and to practice basic skills in experimental design. 12/07/13 2:08 PM • Interpreting Graphs and Data: Data Q activities pair with the new in-text Data Analysis Questions and coach students to further develop skills related to presenting, interpreting, and thinking critically about environmental science data. • “First Impressions” Pre-Quizzes help teachers determine their students’ existing knowledge of environmental issues and core content areas at the outset of the academic term, providing class-specific data that can then be employed for powerful teachable moments throughout the term. Assessment items in the Test Bank connect to each quiz item, so teachers can formally assess student understanding. • More Video Field Trips have been added to the existing library in MasteringEnvironmentalScience. With three new videos you can now kick off your class period with a short visit to a wind farm, a site tackling invasive species, or a sustainable college campus. Existing features MasteringEnvironmentalScience also retains its popular existing features. These include existing Interpreting Graphs and Data exercises and the interactive GraphIt! program, each of which guides students in exploring how to present and interpret data and how to create graphs; interactive Causes and Consequences exercises, which let students probe the causes behind major issues, their consequences, and possible solutions; and Viewpoints, paired essays authored by invited experts who present divergent points of view on topical questions. Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, AP Edition, has grown from our experiences in teaching, research, and writing. We have been guided in our efforts by input from the hundreds of teachers across North America who have served as reviewers and advisors. The participation of so many learned, thoughtful, and committed experts and educators has improved this volume in countless ways. We sincerely hope that our efforts are worthy of the immense importance of our subject matter. We invite you to let us know how well we have achieved our goals and where you feel we have fallen short. Please write to us in care of our editor Alison Rodal ([email protected]) at Pearson Education. We value your feedback and are eager to know how we can serve you better. –Jay Withgott and Matthew Laposata Supplements A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 13 This powerful media package is organized chapter-by-chapter and includes all teaching resources in one convenient location. You’ll find Video Field Trips, PowerPoint presentations, Active Lecture questions to facilitate class discussions (for use with or without clickers), and an image library that includes all art and tables from the text. Included on the IRDVD, the test bank includes hundreds of multiple-choice questions plus unique graphing, and scenariobased questions to test students’ critical-thinking abilities. Instructor Guide This comprehensive resource provides chapter outlines, key terms, and teaching tips for lecture and classroom activities. Pearson Education Test Prep Series for AP® Environmental Science The new edition, written specifically to accompany Environment: The Science Behind the Stories 5e, AP Edition, includes a chapter-by-chapter topic review; study tips and organization ideas; misconception warnings; practice quizzes for each chapter with answers and explanations; and practice AP-like exams. Available for purchase. MasteringEnvironmentalScience™ for Environment: The Science Behind the Stories\MasteringEnvironmentalScience with Pearson eText is the most effective and widely used online tutorial, homework, and assessment system for the sciences. Upon textbook purchase, students and teachers are granted access to MasteringEnvironmentalScience with Pearson eText. Teachers can obtain preview or adoption access for MasteringEnvironmentalScience in one of the following ways: Preview Access Teachers can request preview access online by visiting PearsonSchool.com/Access_Request (choose option 2). Preview Access information will be sent to the teacher via email. Adoption Access • A Pearson Adoption Access Card, with codes and complete instructions, will be delivered with your textbook purchase (ISBN: 0-13-034391-9). • Ask your sales representative for an Adoption Access Code Card (ISBN: 0-13-034391-9). • Visit PearsonSchool.com/Access_Request (choose option 3). Adoption access information will be sent to the teacher via email. Students, ask your teacher for access. P R E FAC E Some of the teacher supplements and resources for this text are available electronically to qualified adopters on the Instructor Resource Center (IRC). Upon adoption or to preview, please go to www.pearsonschool.com/access_request and select Instructor Resource Center. You will be required to complete a brief one-time registration subject to verification of educator status. Upon verification, access information and instructions will be sent to you via email. Once logged into the IRC, enter ISBN 0133540146 in the “Search our Catalog” box to locate resources. Electronic teacher supplements are also available within the Instructor’s tab of MasteringEnvironmentalScience. Instructor Resource Center on DVD with TestGen xiii 12/07/13 2:08 PM Acknowledgments xxii A textbook is the product of many more minds and hearts than one might guess from the names on the cover. The two of us are exceedingly fortunate to be supported and guided by a tremendous publishing team and by a small army of experts in environmental science who have generously shared their time and expertise. The strengths of this book result from the collective labor and dedication of innumerable people. We would first like to thank our acquisitions editor, Alison Rodal. Alison joined us at the outset of this edition, bringing a fresh perspective to the book along with skills and experience from multiple aspects of publishing. Her insight, alacrity, and efficacy have greatly enhanced the outcome. We—and the instructors and students who use this book—are fortunate to have her at the helm. Project editor Anna Amato was also key to the success of this edition. Anna’s careful and perceptive editing benefited all of us, and her creative involvement in layout and in the art program improved the book in many ways. We also appreciated her skillful management of the endless publishing logistics during the preparation of this edition. It was a pleasure to work with Alison and Anna on this edition, and we appreciate their patience with us and their dedication to top-quality work. We wish to thank our editor-in-chief Beth Wilbur for her strong and steady support of this book through its five editions. We also thank executive director of development Deborah Gale. Sincere gratitude is due to Beth and to Pearson’s upper management for continuing to invest the resources and topnotch personnel that our books are enjoying now and have enjoyed over the past decade. Editorial assistants Rachel Brickner and Libby Reiser provided timely and effective help. We also thank Camille Herrera, who helped launch production of this edition, and Shannon Tozier, who saw it through production. Sally Peyrefitte once again provided meticulous copy editing of our text, and photo researcher Zoe Milgram helped acquire quality photos. Wynne Au Yeung did an exceptionally smooth job with the art program, and Yvo Riezebos designed the brilliant new text interior and the cover. We send a huge thank-you to production editor Kelly Keeler and the rest of the staff at Cenveo® Publisher Services for their fantastic work putting this fifth edition together. In addition, we remain grateful for lasting contributions to the book’s earlier editions by Nora Lally-Graves, Mary Ann Murray, Susan Teahan, Tim Flem, and Dan Kaveney, as well as by Etienne Benson, Russell Chun, Jonathan Frye, April Lynch, Kristy Manning, and many others. Needless to say, Scott Brennan was instrumental. His ideas, words, and voice have reverberated through the editions even as the particulars have evolved many times over. And as much as anyone, our former editor Chalon Bridges deserves credit for making this book what it is. Chalon’s heartfelt commitment to quality educational publishing has long inspired us all, and our efforts continue to owe a great deal to her astute guidance and vision. A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 22 As we move deeper into the electronic age, MasteringEnvironmentalScience plays an ever-larger role in what we do. As we worked to expand our online offerings with this edition, we thank Kayla Rihani, Julie Stoughton, Steven Frankel, Karen Sheh, Tania Mlawer, Juliana Golden, Lee Ann Doctor, and Daniel Ross for their work on the Mastering website and our media supplements. A special thanks to Eric Flagg for his tremendous Video Field Trips. As always, a select number of top instructors from around North America have teamed up with us to produce the supplementary materials used by so many educators, and we remain deeply grateful for their valuable help. Our thanks go to Danielle DuCharme for updating our Instructor’s Guide, to Todd Tracy for his help with the Test Bank, and to Steven Frankel for revising the PowerPoint lectures and clicker questions. Of course, none of this has any impact on education without the sales and marketing staff to get the book into your hands. Marketing Managers Amee Mosley and Lauren Harp are dedicating their talent and enthusiasm to the book’s promotion and distribution. Moreover, the many sales representatives who help to communicate our vision, deliver our product to instructors, and work with instructors to assure their satisfaction, are absolutely vital. We have been blessed with an amazingly sharp and dedicated sales force, and we deeply appreciate their tireless work and commitment. In the lists of reviewers that follow, we acknowledge the many instructors and outside experts who have helped us to maximize the quality and accuracy of our content and presentation through their chapter reviews, feature reviews, class tests, focus group participation, and other services. If the thoughtfulness and thoroughness of these hundreds of people are any indication, we feel confident that the teaching of environmental science is in excellent hands! Lastly, we each owe personal debts to the people nearest and dearest to us. Jay thanks his parents and his many teachers and mentors over the years for making his own life and education so enriching. He gives loving thanks to his wife, Susan, who has endured this book’s writing and revision over the years with patience and understanding, and who has provided caring support throughout. Matt thanks his family, friends, and colleagues, and is grateful for his children, who give him three reasons to care passionately about the future. Most importantly, he thanks his wife, Lisa, for blessing every day of his life for the past 25 years with her keen insight, passion for life, unconscious grace, and effortless beauty—and for understanding him in ways no one else ever could. The talents, input, and advice of Susan and of Lisa have been vital to this project, and without their support our own contributions would not have been possible. We dedicate this book to today’s students, who will shape tomorrow’s world. –Jay Withgott and Matthew Laposata 12/07/13 2:08 PM Correlated to The College Board Topics for AP® Environmental Science The following correlates the Advanced Placement® Environmental Science topics as outlined by the College Board (dated Fall 2013) with the corresponding chapters in the 5th edition of Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, AP Edition. We continually monitor the College Board’s AP® Course Description for updates to exam topics. For the most current AP® Exam Topic correlation for this textbook, visit www.PearsonSchool.com/AdvancedCorrelations. I. Earth Systems and Resources (10–15%) Chapter 2, Chapter 17, Appendix E: Geologic Time Scale (Geologic time scale; plate tectonics, earthquakes, volcanism; seasons; solar intensity and latitude) B. The Atmosphere Chapter 16, Chapter 17, Chapter 18 (Composition; structure; weather and climate; atmospheric circulation and the Coriolis Effect; atmosphere—ocean interactions; ENSO) C. Global Water Resources and Use Chapter 15, Chapter 16 (Freshwater/saltwater; ocean circulation; agricultural, industrial, and domestic use; surface and groundwater issues; global problems; conservation) D. Soil and Soil Dynamics Chapter 2, Chapter 9 (Rock cycle; formation; composition; physical and chemical properties; main soil types; erosion and other soil problems; soil conservation) II. The Living World (10–15%) A. Ecosystem Structure Chapter 3, Chapter 4, Chapter 5 (Biological populations and communities; ecological niches; interactions among species; keystone species; species diversity and edge effects; major terrestrial and aquatic biomes) B. Energy Flow Chapter 2, Chapter 4, Chapter 5 (Photosynthesis and cellular respiration; food webs and trophic levels; ecological pyramids) C. Ecosystem Diversity Chapter 3, Chapter 4, Chapter 5, Chapter 6, Chapter 11 (Biodiversity; natural selection; evolution; ecosystem services) D. Natural Ecosystem Change Chapter 4, Chapter 18 (Climate shifts; species movement; ecological succession) E. Natural Biogeochemical Cycles Chapter 2, Chapter 5 (Carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, water, conservation of matter) III. Population (10–15%) A. Population Biology Concepts Chapter 3 (Population ecology; carrying capacity; reproductive strategies; survivorship) B. Human Population 1. Human population dynamics Chapter 1, Chapter 8 (Historical population sizes; distribution; fertility rates; growth rates and doubling times; demographic transition; age-structure diagrams) 2. Population size Chapter 8 (Strategies for sustainability; case studies; national policies) 3. Impacts of population growth Chapter 8, Chapter 10, Chapter 11 (Hunger; disease; economic effects; resource use; habitat destruction) IV. Land and Water Use (10–15%) A. Agriculture A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 23 C O R R E L AT I O N G U I D E A. Earth Science Concepts xxiii 12/07/13 2:08 PM 1. Feeding a growing population Chapter 9, Chapter 10, Chapter 12 (Human nutritional requirements; types of agriculture; Green Revolution; genetic engineering and crop productions; deforestation; irrigation; sustainable agriculture) 2. Controlling pests Chapter 10, Chapter 14 (Types of pesticides; costs and benefits of pesticide use; integrated pest management; relevant laws) B. Forestry Chapter 12 (Tree plantations; old growth forests; forest fires; forest management; national forests) C. Rangelands Chapter 9 (Overgrazing; deforestation; desertification; rangeland management; federal rangelands) D. Other Land Use 1. Urban land development Chapter 13 (Planned development; suburban sprawl; urbanization) 2. Transportation infrastructure Chapter 12, Chapter 13, Chapter 15 (Federal highway system; canals and channels; roadless areas; ecosystem impacts) 3. Public and federal lands Chapter 3, Chapter 6, Chapter 11, Chapter 12, Chapter 19 (Management; wilderness areas; national parks; wildlife refuges; forests; wetlands) 4. Land conservation options Chapter 3, Chapter 4, Chapter 6, Chapter 11, Chapter 12, Chapter 22, Chapter 23 (Preservation; remediation; mitigation; restoration) 5. Sustainable land-use strategies Chapter 9, Chapter 11, Chapter 12, Chapter 13 E. Mining Chapter 6, Chapter 19, Chapter 23 (Mineral formation; extraction; global reserves; relevant laws and treaties) F. Fishing Chapter 10, Chapter 16 (Fishing techniques; overfishing; aquaculture; relevant laws and treaties) G. Global Economics Chapter 1, Chapter 6, Chapter 7, Chapter 24 (Globalization; World Bank; Tragedy of the Commons; relevant laws and treaties) V. Energy Resources and Consumption (10–15%) A. Energy Concepts Chapter 2, Chapter 19 (Energy forms; power; units; conversions; Laws of Thermodynamics) B. Energy Consumption 1. History (Industrial Revolution; exponential growth; energy crisis) Chapter 1, Chapter 8, Chapter 19 2. Present global energy use Chapter 2, Chapter 19, Chapter 20, Chapter 21 3. Future energy needs Chapter 2, Chapter 19, Chapter 20, Chapter 21 C. Fossil Fuel Resources and Use Chapter 19, Chapter 20 (Formation of coal, oil, and natural gas; extraction/purification methods; world reserves and global demand; synfuels; environmental advantages/disadvantages of sources) D. Nuclear Energy Chapter 20 (Nuclear fission process; nuclear fuel; electricity production; nuclear reactor types; environmental advantages/disadvantages; safety issues; radiation and human health; radioactive wastes; nuclear fusion) xxiv A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 24 12/07/13 2:08 PM Chapter 15, Chapter 20 (Dams; flood control; salmon; silting; other impacts) F. Energy Conservation Chapter 13, Chapter 18, Chapter 19 (Energy efficiency; CAFÉ standards; hybrid electric vehicles; mass transit) G. Renewable Energy Chapter 2, Chapter 20, Chapter 21 (Solar energy; solar electricity; hydrogen fuel cells; biomass; wind energy; small-scale hydroelectric; ocean waves and tidal energy; geothermal; environmental advantages/disadvantages) VI. Pollution (25–30%) A. Pollution Types 1. Air pollution Chapter 13, Chapter 17, Chapter 18, Chapter 19 (Sources- primary and secondary; major air pollutants; measurement units; smog; acid deposition- causes and effects; heat islands and temperature inversions; indoor air pollution; remediation and reduction strategies; Clean Air Act and other relevant laws) 2. Noise pollution Chapter 13 (Sources; effects; control measures) 3. Water Pollution Chapter 5, Chapter 7, Chapter 15, Chapter 16, Chapter 19 (Types; sources, causes, and effects; cultural eutrophication; groundwater pollution; maintaining water quality; water purification; sewage treatment/septic systems; Clean Water Act and other relevant laws) 4. Solid Waste Chapter 22 (Types; disposal; reduction) B. Impacts on Environment and Human Health 1. Hazards to human health Chapter 14, Chapter 17 (Environmental risk analysis; acute and chronic effects; doseresponse relationships; air pollutants; smoking and other risks) 2. Hazardous chemicals in the environment Chapter 14, Chapter 22 (Types of hazardous waste; treatment/disposal of hazardous waste; cleanup of contaminated sites; biomagnification; relevant laws) C. Economic impacts Chapter 1, Chapter 6, Chapter 7, Chapter 24 (Cost-benefit analysis; externalities; marginal costs; sustainability) VII. Global Change (10-15%) A. Stratospheric Ozone Chapter 17 (Formation of stratospheric ozone; ultraviolet radiation; causes of ozone depletion; effects of ozone depletion; strategies for reducing ozone depletion; relevant laws and treaties) B. Global Warming Chapter 3, Chapter 4, Chapter 6, Chapter 11, Chapter 18 (Greenhouse gases and greenhouse effect; impacts and consequences of global warming; reducing climate change; relevant laws and treaties) C. Loss of Biodiversity Chapter 3, Chapter 4, Chapter 11, Chapter 12, Chapter 16 1. Habitat loss; overuse; pollution; introduced species; endangered and extinct species. 2. Maintenance through conservation Chapter 3, Chapter 4, Chapter 11, Chapter 12, Chapter 16 3. Relevant laws and treaties Chapter 11 C O R R E L AT I O N G U I D E E. Hydroelectric Power xxv A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 25 12/07/13 2:08 PM Engage with real people, real places, and real data Integrated Central Case Studies highlight the real people, real places, and real data behind environmental issues. The Integrated Central Case Studies provide contextual framework to make science memorable and engaging. NEW! 30% of the Central Case Studies in the book are entirely new. New case studies focus on hydraulic fracturing (Ch07), sustainable agriculture (Ch09), wildlife conservation (Ch12), air pollution (Ch17), oil sands extraction (Ch19), and more! CEN TR A L C A S E S T UDY The Tohoku Earthquake: Has It Shaken the World’s Trust in Nuclear Power? NORTH KOREA Central Case Studies draw students into the chapter with engaging topics that begin and are woven throughout each chapter. “This used to be one of the best places for a business. I’m amazed at how little is left.” Sea of Japan (East Sea) Fukushima Daiichi SOUTH KOREA JAPAN —Takahiro Chiba, surveying the devastated downtown area of Ishinomaki, Japan, where his family’s sushi restaurant was located “Fukushima should not just contain lessons for Japan, but for all 31 countries with nuclear power.” North Pacific Ocean At 2:46 p.m. on March 11, 2011, the land along the northeastern coast of the Japanese island of Honshu began to shake violently—and continued to shake for six minutes. These tremors were caused when a large section of the seafloor along a fault line 125 km (77 mi) offshore suddenly lurched, releasing huge amounts of energy through the crust and generating an earthquake of magnitude 9.0 on the Richter scale (a scale used to measure the strength of earthquakes). Little did anyone know at the time that this quake would initiate a series of events that would affect not only Japan, but also the future of nuclear power around the world. The Tohoku earthquake, as it was later named, was not the first major earthquake to strike Japan. The city of Kobe experienced substantial damage from a quake in 1995 that claimed over 5500 lives. And in 1923, an earthquake devastated the cities of Tokyo and Yokohama, resulting in over 142,000 deaths. Losses of life and property from the Tohoku quake were far less extensive than the losses from these earlier events, thanks to new stringent building codes that enable buildings to resist crumbling and toppling over during earthquakes. But even when the earth stopped shaking, the residents of northeastern Japan knew that further danger might still await them—from a tsunami. A tsunami (“harbor wave” in English) is a powerful surge of seawater generated when an offshore earthquake displaces large volumes of rocks and sediment on the ocean bottom, suddenly pushing the overlying ocean water upward. This upward movement of water creates waves that speed outward from the earthquake site in all directions. These waves are hardly noticeable at sea, but can rear up to staggering heights —Tatsujiro Suzuki, Vice-chairman, Japan Atomic Energy Commission as strong ocean surges followed the 1923 Tokyo–Yokohama earthquake, pushing walls of debris in front of them and drowning victims still trapped in the wreckage from the earthquake. The Japanese had built seawalls to protect against tsunamis, but the Tohoku quake caused the island of Honshu to sink, lowering the height of the seawalls by up to 2 m (6.5 ft) in some locations. Waves reaching up to 15 m (49 ft) in height then overwhelmed these defenses (Figure 2.1). The raging water swept up to 9.6 km (6 mi) inland, scoured buildings from their foundations, and New topographical maps help students see Figure the political andovertop a seawall following the 2.1 Tsunami waves environmental context of stories. xiv WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd 2 Tohoku earthquake in 2011. The tsunami caused a greater loss of life and property than the earthquake that generated it and led to a meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. 12/07/13 2:39 PM www.masteringenvironmentalscience.com NEW! Video Field trips include: • Invasive Species: Lionfish • Solutions: Sustainability on Campus • Wind Power Wind Power Video Field Trips offer fascinating tours of real environmental issues and solutions employed to cope with them. These videos are assignable in MasteringEnvironmentalScience and are on the Instructor Resource DVD. Solar Energy Current Events from the New York Times are regularly updated and invite you to connect course topics with current environmental issues. ABC News video clips invite you to engage in the current conversation about the environment and sustainability. xv WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd 3 12/07/13 2:40 PM that feed on plankton-eating fish. (The left side of Figure more energy per calorie that products. levels. When an organism dies and sinks to the bottom, detritivores scavenge its tissues and decomposers recycle its nutrients. features highlight how scientists develop hypotheses, test WEIGhING thE 4.9 shows these relationships in a very generalized form.) interpret and analyze stories Zebra mussels and quagga mussels, by eating both phytoplankton and zooplankton, function on multiple trophic using scientific literacy skills Science Behind the Story predictions, analyze and interpret data, and share findings. Energy, biomass, and numbers decrease at higher trophic levels At each trophic level, organisms use energy in cellular respiration (p. 32) to grow and maintain themselves. More energy goes toward maintenance than to building new tissues, and most ends up being given off as heat. Only a small amount of the energy is transferred to the next trophic level through NEW! 30%Aofgeneral the Science predation, herbivory, or parasitism. rule of thumb is that each trophic level containsthe justStories 10% of the energy of Behind are the trophic level below it (although the actual proportion can entirely new in the text. vary greatly). This pattern can be visualized as a pyramid (Figure 4.10). Topics include: This pyramid-like pattern also tends to hold for the • Tracking Fukushima’s nuclear numbers of organisms at each trophic level; in general, fewer organisms exist atlegacy higher(Ch02) trophic levels than at lower ones. A grasshopper eats many plants in itsof lifetime, • Tracking Populations a rodent eats many grasshoppers, and a hawk eats many Hakalau’s Forest Birds (Ch03) rodents. Thus, for every hawk in a community there must • Does Fracking Contaminate brazilian soap operas, called telenovelas, are a surprising cultural force for promoting be many rodents, still more grasshoppers, and an immense lower fertility. Here, residents gather outside a cafe in Rio de Janeiro to watch the popuDrinking Water? number of plants. Moreover, because the(Ch07) difference in lar program Avenida Brasil. numbers of organisms among trophic levels tends to be And More! large, the same pyramid-like relationship often holds true characters, settings, and plot lines China; the procedure is illegal except in forcanbiomass, the collective mass of living matter in a given with which everyday Brazilians rare circumstances. identify. As Brazil’s economy grew with place and time. Telenovelas do not overtly industrialization, people’s nutrition address fertility issues, but they The pyramid pattern illustrates why eating at lower and access to health care improved, do promote a vision of the “ideal” greatly reducing infant mortality rates. trophic levels—being vegan or vegetarian, for instance— Brazilian family. This family is typically Families no longer needed to have decreases a person’s ecological footprint. Each amount of middle or upper class, materialistic, more children than they desired for fear individualistic, and full of empowone or more would die at a young age. meat or other animal product we eat requires the input of a ered women. By challenging existing Increasing personal wealth promoted greater amount of plant material (see Figure 10.9, cultural and religious valuesconsiderably through materialism and greater emphasis on their characters, novelas had, career and possessions over family p.and 249). Thus, when we eat animal products, we use up far THE SCIENCE BEHINd THE STORy did Soap Operas Reduce Fertility in Brazil? Over the past 50 years, the South American nation of Brazil experienced the second-largest drop in fertility among developing nations with large populations—second only to China. In the 1960s, the average woman in Brazil had six children. Today, Brazil’s total fertility rate is 1.9 children per woman, which is lower than that of the United States. Brazil’s drastic decrease in fertility is interesting because, unlike China, it occurred without governmental policies that advocated controls on its citizens’ reproduction. So how did Brazil accomplish this? A major factor was change in society’s view of women. It began with a civil rights movement in the 1960s, which gave females equal access to education and the opportunity to pursue careers outside the home. These efforts have been highly successful. Women now comprise 40% of the workforce in Brazil and graduate from college in greater numbers than men. And in 2010, Brazilians elected a woman, Dilma Rousseff, as their nation’s president. Although the Brazilian government does not put restrictions on people’s reproduction, it provides family planning and contraception to all its citizens free of charge. Eighty percent of married women of childbearing age in Brazil currently utilize contraception, a rate higher than that in the United States or Canada. Universal access to family planning has given women control over their desired family size and has helped reduce fertility across all economic groups, from the very rich to the very poor. Brazil is largely Roman Catholic, and Roman Catholicism prohibits the use of artificial methods of birth control, so the high rates of contraceptive use in modern Brazil represent a significant shift from traditional values. Induced abortion is not utilized in Brazil as it is in 204 M08_WITH7428_05_SE_C08.indd 204 and children. The nation also urbanized as people flocked to growing cities such as Río de Janeiro and São Paolo, conveying the fertility reductions that occur when people leave the farm for the city. It turns out, however, that Brazil had a rather unique influence affecting its fertility rates over the past several decades—"soap operas.” Brazilian soap operas, called telenovelas or novelas, are a cultural phenomenon and are watched religiously by people of all ages, races, and incomes. Each novela follows the activities of several fictional families, and these TV shows are wildly popular because they have continue to have, a profound impact on Brazilian society. In essence, these programs provided a model family for Brazilians to emulate—with small family sizes being a key characteristic. In a 2012 paper in the American Tertiary Economic Journal: Applied consumers Economics, a team of researchers from Bocconi University inSecondary Italy, George Washington University, and consumers the Inter-American Development Bank (based in Washington, D.C.) analyzed Primary various parameters to investigate consumers statistical relationships between telenovelas and fertility patterns in Brazil Producers from 1965 to 2000. Rede Globo, the network that has a virtual monopoly NEW! Data Analysis Q’s are paired with select figures in each chapter to help you develop your scientific literacy skills. These questions allow you to check your own understanding of environmental data as you read through each chapter. WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd 4 10 100 1000 Figure 4.10 Lower trophic levels generally contain more organisms, energy content, and biomass than higher trophic levels. The tenfold ratio shown here is typical, but the shape of the pyramid may vary greatly. 05/07/13 4:41 PM 82 xvi 1 Using the ratios shown in this example, let’s suppose that a system has 3000 grasshoppers. How many rodents would be expected? thE FOOtPrINtS OF OUr dI would you estimate consist animal products? Would you portion in order to reduce yo some other ways in which through your food choices. Food webs show feed and energy flow As energy is transferred from ones, it is said to pass up a fo ing relationships. Plant, grass up a food chain—as do phyto fish-eating birds. Thinking in terms of fo ful, but ecological systems a ple linear chains. A more feeding relationships in a visual map of energy flow many paths along which en sume one another. Figure 4.11 shows a food ous forest of eastern North A and leaves out the vast majorit occur. Note, however, that eve we can pick out a number of fo of species. A Great Lakes food w plankton that photosynthesiz zooplankton that eat them, f zooplankton, larger fish that preys that parasitize the fish native mussels and clams an sels and quagga mussels tha include diving ducks that form now prey on the mussels. This food web would al benthic (bottom-dwelling) inv refuse of the non-native muss promotes bacterial growth an ease to native bivalves, it al ish many benthic invertebrat include underwater plants a growth is enhanced as the non plankton, allowing sunlight to column. (Jump ahead to Figur of some of these effects.) Overall, zebra and quagg food web by shifting product benthic and littoral (nearshor sels help benthic and littoral open-water fishes (see The Scie M04_WITH7428_05_SE_C04.indd 82 12/07/13 2:40 PM use www.masteringenvironmentalscience.com to practice scientific literacy skills NEW! Process of Science Coaching Activities, created by coauthor Matt Laposata, help you practice the process of science demonstrated in the Science Behind the Story feature. These activities allow you to think like a scientist and put the scientific method into practice. Wrong Answer Feedback Gain a better understanding of the process of science with specific wrongfeedback. Expanded! Interpreting Graphs and Data Activities help you develop basic data analysis skills and practice interpreting environmental data. Keep Practicing GraphIt Activities help you analyze an environmental issue and understand the research data. xvii WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd 5 12/07/13 2:40 PM identify learning goals and recognize misconceptions 3 NEW! FAQs highlight and correct areas would sometimes fly into death zones. Today, thousands common misconceptions of honeycreepers from mountain forests about die each year when they fly downslope and are bitten by malarial mosquitoes. As environmental isssues. environmental conditions vary in time and space, adaptation Great Dane becomes a moving target. One-quarter of Hakalau is FaQ Native Hawaiian forest at Hakalau Forest NWR, and the endangered ‘akiapōlā‘au Evolution, Biodiversity, and Population Ecology Upon completing this chapter, you will be able to: Explain natural selection and cite evidence for this process Outline the characteristics of populations that help predict population growth Describe how evolution influences biodiversity Assess logistic growth, carrying capacity, limiting factors, and other fundamental concepts in population ecology Discuss reasons for species extinction and mass extinction events List the levels of ecological organization Identify efforts and challenges involved in the conservation of biodiversity Almost no area r above the 13°C isotherm and malaria-free, and nearly all of it is above the 17°C isotherm. above the 13°C i Chihuahua so malaria will en the whole refuge Isn’t evolution based on just one man’s beliefs? Because Charles Darwin contributed so much to our early understanding of evolution, many people assume the concept itself hinges on his ideas. But scientists and laypeople 17°C had been observing nature and puzzling over fossils for a long isotherm (a) Ancestral wolf (Canis l time, and the notion of evolution was being discussed long 13°Cbefore Darwin. Once he and Alfred Russel Wallace indepenHakalau isotherm dently proposedForest the NWR concept of natural selection, scientists finally gained a precise and feasible mechanism to explain (a) Todayhow and why organisms change across generations. (b) With 2°C of climate warming Later, Cabbage geneticists discovered Gregor Mendel’s research and worked Figure 3.21 Researchers have modeled how a warming climate will affect the native birds of out how traits are inherited—and modern evolutionary biolHakalau Forest NWR. Avian malaria cannot survive where temperatures dip below 13°C, and it peaks where ogy was born. Fisher, summer temperatures averageTwentieth-century 17°C. Today (a), 24%scientists of Hakalau lies aboveWright, (cooler than) the 13°C isotherm Simpson, and others ran experiments and is freeDobzhansky, of malaria. If climate warmsMayr, by 2°C, however (b), then the isothermsand move upslope, and only 1% of Brussels Hakalau will remain cooler than 13°C and malaria-free. Data from: Benning, T.L., et al. 2002. Interactions of climate change developed sophisticated mathematical models, documenting sprouts with biological invasions and land use in the Hawaiian Islands: Modeling the fate of endemic birds using a geographic information phenomena with extensive evidence and making evolutionsystems. Proc Natl. Acad. Sci. 99: 14246–14249. ary biology into one of science’s strongest fields. Since then, evolutionary research by thousands of scientists has driven understanding of change biology mean and has Theour challenges of climate that facilitated scientists spectacular advances medicine, and and managers needintoagriculture, come up with new ways to biotechnology. help save The honeycreepers of Hakalau Forest N declining populations. We will learn about the many efforts Refuge, along with many other Hawaiia being made across the world in our exploration of biodiversity helped to illuminate the fundamentals of ev and conservation biology in Chapter 11. In Hawai‘i, it remains Ancestral Brassica oler ulation ecology(b) that are integral to environ to be seen how effectively management and ecotourism can processes of natural selec stem the tide of challenges and help preserve systemsus The evolutionary Evidence of selection is allnatural around Figure 3.4 Selective breed and extinction help determine Earth’s biod in the long term. Resources and efforts to preserve habitat resulted in our many breed The results of natural selection are all around us, visible in standing how ecological processes functio and protect endangered species will likely need to be stepped With dogs (a), we began with every adaptation of every organism. In addition, scientists tion level is crucial to protecting biodiversi up. Programs to restore altered communities to their former ancestral wild species, and b the mass extinction event that many biolog have demonstrated rapid evolution of also traits condition—as is being done the at Hakalau Forest—will be by selection ing for the traits we prefer, we now underway. Population ecology also in necessary. The restoration of ecological communities is one in countless lab experiments, mostly with fast-reproducing as Great(Chapter Danes and of human populations 8), Chihuah another phenomenon we will examine in our next chapter, as weflies. shift organisms such as bacteria, yeast, and fruit environmental created science.our immense variety from populations to communities. Conclusion Learning Objectives at the beginning of each M03_WITH7428_05_SE_C03.indd 47 chapter define what you should be able to do after completing the chapter. MasteringEnvironmentalScience also links assessments to learning objectives so professors can track students’ progress. 04/07/13 2:01 PM The evidence for selection that may be most familiar sprouts, broccoli, and cauliflo to us is that which Darwin himself cited prominently in his ancestral species, Brassica o work 150 years ago: our breeding of domesticated animals. In domesticated dogs, cats, and livestock, we have conducted millennia (Figure 3.4b). Th selection under our own direction. We have chosen animals created corn with bigger with traits we like and bred them together, while not breedwith larger and more num those with we do • Wehaveproducedourpets,farmanimals you ing should nowvariants be able to:not like. Through such selective oranges with better taste. W breeding, we have been able to augment particular traits we by artificial selection. (p. 52) many—for instance, breed prefer. Explain natural selection and cite evidence for this oleracea to create broccoli 3.4a). how evolution influences biod processConsider the great diversity of dog breeds (FigureDescribe sprouts. Our entire agricu People generated every type of dog alive today by •starting Naturalselectioncanactasadiversifying • Becauseorganismsproduceexcessyoung,individualsvary selection. We depend on a withtraits, a single ancestral species and selecting adapt to their environments in myriad way in their and many traits are inherited, some individu-for particular for the very food we eat. desired traits as individuals were bred together. From Great als will prove better at surviving and reproducing. Their • Speciation by geographic isolation (or ot Dane all become dogs are ableprominent to interbreed andduces pro-new species. (pp. 53–54) genes willtobeChihuahua, passed on and more in future generations. (p. 50) duce viable offspring, yet breeders maintain striking differEvolution • The branching patterns ofgenerates phylogenetic ences among them by allowing only like individuals to breed • Mutationsandrecombinationprovidethegeneticvariation historical pattern in which lineages of This (p. process Just as artificial selection for with naturallike. selection. 50) of selection conducted under human diverged. (p. 54) direction is termed artificial selection. farm animals, and crop Artificial selection has given us the many crop plants we elaborate and diversify trai depend on for food, all of which people domesticated from term, natural selection help 52 wild ancestors and carefully bred over years, centuries, or cies and whole new types o Reviewing objectives Reviewing Objectives at the end of each chapter use a learning objective framework to help you review concepts and prepare for exams. xviii M03_WITH7428_05_SE_C03.indd 71 WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd 6 12/07/13 2:40 PM use to enhance www.masteringenvironmentalscience.com your understanding and improve your grade Concept Review Activities guide you through an understanding of complex content. The Pearson eText gives you access to your text whenever and wherever you can access the Internet so you can view it on your computer and/or your mobile device (including IOS and Android) C e N t R a l C a s E s t U dy 3 saving Hawaii’s Native Forest Birds KAUA`I O`AHU Hakalau Forest NWR MAUI Pacific Ocean “When an entire island avifauna . . . is devastated almost overnight because of human meddling, it is, quite simply, a tragedy.” —H. douglas Pratt, ornithologist and expert on Hawaiian birds HAWAI ` I Mauna Kea HAWAI`I Hilo “To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.” —aldo Leopold Mauna Loa Native Hawaiian forest at Hakalau Forest NWR, and the endangered ‘akiapōlā‘au Evolution, Biodiversity, and Population Ecology Upon completing this chapter, you will be able to: Explain natural selection and cite evidence for this process Outline the characteristics of populations that help predict population growth Describe how evolution influences biodiversity Assess logistic growth, carrying capacity, limiting factors, and other fundamental concepts in population ecology Discuss reasons for species extinction and mass extinction events List the levels of ecological organization Identify efforts and challenges involved in the conservation of biodiversity 48 Jack Jeffrey stopped in his tracks. “I hear one!” he said. “Over there in those trees!” Jeffrey quickly led his group of ecotourists through a misty woodland of ferns, grasses, koa trees, and red-flowering ‘ōhi‘a-lehua trees toward an emphatic chirping sound that carried farther than the other bird songs in the forest. At last they spotted the bird—an ‘akiapōlā‘au, one of fewer than 1500 of its kind left alive in the world. The ‘akiapōlā‘au (or “aki” for short) is a sparrow-sized wonder of nature—one of many exquisite birds that evolved on the Hawaiian Islands and exists only here. For millions of years, this chain of islands in the middle of the Pacific Ocean has acted as a cradle of evolution, generating an abundance of new and unique species. Yet in recent years, many of these species have gone from cradle to grave. Half of Hawaii’s native bird species (70 of 140) have gone extinct in recent times, and the percentage of species that teeter on the brink of extinction here today is higher than anywhere else in the world. The aki is one of 30 species of endangered birds remaining on the Hawaiian Islands. It is a type of Hawaiian honeycreeper, a group of birds numbering 18 living species (and at least 38 species recently extinct), all of which originated from individuals of a single ancestral species that reached Hawai‘i several million years ago. As new volcanic islands emerged from the ocean and then eroded away, and as forests expanded and contracted over the millennia, populations were split many times, and new honeycreeper species evolved. As honeycreeper species diverged from one another, they evolved different colors, sizes, body shapes, feeding behaviors, M03_WITH7428_05_SE_C03.indd 48 M03_WITH7428_05_SE_C03.indd 47 mating preferences, diets, and bill shapes. Bills in some species became short and straight, allowing birds to glean insects from leaf surfaces. In other species, bills became long and downcurved, enabling birds to probe into flowers to sip nectar. The bills of still other species became thick and strong for cracking seeds. Some bills became highly specialized: The aki uses the short, straight lower half of its bill to peck, woodpecker-style, into dead twigs and branches of koa trees to find beetle grubs, and then uses the long, downcurved upper half to reach in and extract the grubs. Hawaii’s honeycreepers thrived for several million years in the island’s forests, amid a unique community of plants. The stately ‘ōhi‘a, a slow-growing tree that can live for 2000 years, spreads twisting gnarled limbs covered with moss and lichens through the misty air, and offers up bright red flowers that provide nectar and pollen to birds and insects. The koa thrives here too, a fast-growing acacia tree with twigs that the aki snaps off in its search for grubs. A multitude of shrubs, herbs, and vines found nowhere else in the world used to fill out the forest understory. Today native Hawaiian forests are under siege. The crisis began several hundred years ago when Polynesian settlers colonized the islands, cutting down trees and introducing nonnative animals. Europeans arrived in the 1800s and did more of the same. Pigs, goats, and cattle ate their way through the native plants, transforming lush forests into ragged grasslands. Rats, cats, dogs, and mongooses destroyed the eggs and young of native ground-nesting birds. Foreign plants from Asia, Europe, and America, whose seeds accompanied the people and animals, spread across the altered landscape. 04/07/13 2:01 PM 04/07/13 2:01 PM Additional MasteringEnvironmentalScience Resources Include: • Learning Catalytics™ allows you to communicate with your instructor in real time via your mobile device during class to enhance your understanding and comprehension of the course material. • First impressions quiz questions help you assess your understanding of environmental issues and key concepts from the very first day of class. • BioFlix coaching activities use dynamic 3-D animations to teach tough topics in Environmental Science. Activities are highly interactive, automatically graded, and include a wide variety of question types. • Study Area offers a 24/7 self-study resource for you presented in an easy-to-understand chapter guide design. xix WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd 7 12/07/13 2:40 PM for instructors: engage and assess students with www.masteringenvironmentalscience.com Quickly select pre-built assignments created by Matthew Laposata that offer a wide range of interactive, engaging, assignable activities—including animations, videos, and news articles. With MasteringEnvironmental Science™ students benefit from activities that feature immediate wronganswer feedback to help keep them on track. NEW! Learning Catalytics Learning Catalytics™ is a “bring your own device” student engagement, assessment, and classroom intelligence system. With Learning Catalytics you can infuse your lectures with opportunities for active learning, assess student understanding in real time, and adjust your lecture accordingly. xx WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd 8 12/07/13 2:40 PM track student performance and help students succeed Gradebook Get easy-to-interpret insights into student performance using the gradebook. • Every assignment is automatically graded. • Shades of red highlight vulnerable students and challenging assignments. One-click Diagnostics show where students are struggling or progressing. Track student performance and concept mastery against publisher-provided learning outcomes, or create your own. xxi WITH7428_05_WT_PRF.indd 9 12/07/13 2:40 PM Environment The Science Behind the Stories 5TH EDITION xxvi A01_WITH7428_05_AP_FM.indd 26 12/07/13 2:08 PM