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Human Impacts on the Environment Environmental Science Pollution–any environmental contaminant that causes damage or harm air water land Types of pollutants • Chemical– car exhaust, oil, smoke stacks, pesticides • Solid– litter, trash, soot, plastic • Biological– sewage, decaying material • Thermal– excess heat in an aquatic habitat harms the ecosystem • Radiation– radioactive waste Overpopulation Effects • Overuse/misuse of resources • Encroachment on natural habitats • Increased pollution • Failed infrastructure One major cause is lack of education. Earth’s human population in 2013– 7 billion Estimated carrying capacity 4-16 billion Habitat Destruction • First bullet point here • Second bullet point here Pollution Encroachment Overuse Group D • Third bullet point here Deforestation Approximately 18 million acres are lost each year Reasons • timber harvest • commercial or residential development • create farmland Effects • loss of biodiversity • loss of rare or currently unknown species • increased erosion • Increased carbon dioxide in atmosphere Desertification Drought is a natural cause Humans contribute by allowing overgrazing and irresponsible farming Erosion by wind and water are the most significant effects Biodiversity– the number and variety of species in an ecosystem Biodiverse ecosystems are healthier Anything that threatens biodiversity, causing species to become threatened, endangered, or extinct, weakens the ecosystem. Threatened Species The species’ numbers are in decline, and the species is likely to become endangered. Endangered species The numbers are so low that the species is likely to become extinct without immediate protective measures Extinction– if a species has not been present in 50 years Chinese river dolphin Stephen’s Island wren Dodo Root-spine palm Biodiversity • Ecosystems are interconnected in many ways (it’s not always obvious) • Biodiversity increases Humans benefit from biodiversity through • Medicines • Agriculture • Industry sustainability How many species have become extinct before they were even discovered? How much biodiversity has been lost, while still unknown? Modern impact of humans on environment began during the industrial revolution • Drastic increase in use of fossil fuels (coal, oil, natural gas) • Land damage from mining those fossil fuels • Rapid urbanization (led to pollution, waste, lack of infrastructure, diseases) • 200+ years of pollution (air, land, and water) • Extreme increase in greenhouse gas emissions Individuals can evaluate their own carbon footprint– a measure (in pounds) of each person, group, or company’s emissions of greenhouse gases • Anything that uses electricity– heating/cooling, household lighting, electronics • Using your car • Waste products Conservation & Sustainability Individual or group efforts to preserve or protect the environment– biodiversity & natural resources • Prevent pollution • Recycling • Reduce carbon footprint • Limit consumption • Limit waste • Reduce use of fossil fuels Early 1900s– Theodore Roosevelt enacted the American Antiquities Act (established National Parks & other preserved wildlife areas) 1936– National Wildlife Federation founded 1962—Rachel Carson publishes Silent Spring 1963– Clean Air Act 1965– Water Quality Act 1970– First Earth Day 1972- Clean Water Act 1980– Superfund 1990-National Environmental Education Act 2001– U.S. rejects Kyoto Protocol (emissions control) Partial History of Environmentalism in the US Are atmospheric carbon dioxide levels rising? Is Earth’s average temperature increasing enough to cause a difference? Is this a naturally-occurring phenomenon? Is this a catastrophe that humans have caused? Climate change– the big debate Shrinking glaciers Loss of sea ice Rising sea level Longer, more severe heat waves & droughts • Increased risk of fires & floods • Stronger storms • Change in weather patterns • • • • Effects of climate change