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Middle School Study Guide Water T o survive, every living thing needs water. In Canada, we can turn the tap and our needs for safe drinking water are met. At times, when we use more than usual and there’s a lack of rainfall, we’re asked to use less. Conserving water doesn’t mean we stop drinking water. It means using less for everything else. While we focus on conserving, 20 per cent of the world’s population has no drinking water. For everyone in Canada, and the rest of the world, water supply is affected by pollution, changes in climate and demand from increasing population and lifestyles. Water Availability Available drinking water makes up less than 1% of the world’s total water supply. In the raindrop image, the tiny white triangle at the top of it represents the small percentage of potable water. Vocabulary Aquifer - an underground source of water. Water can be found by drilling a well into the ground and installing a pump. Hydrological cycle - also known as the water cycle. Water moves continuously on, above and below the surface of the Earth. It moves in liquid, vapour, and ice forms. How is water used in Canada? 60% Hydroelectric power generation 18.5% Manufacturing 9.5% Municipalities 8% Agriculture 4% Mining Impervious surfaces - a surface that prevents water from soaking or seeping through it. e.g. pavement. Irrigation - water that is added to soil to help grow crops when there is not enough rain. Potable water - water that is safe for drinking. Precipitation - water (in any form of solid, liquid or gas) that falls to the Earth. How does water use compare? On average, per person daily use (in litres): Europeans 135 Americans 300 Canadians British Columbians 343 490 Storm drain pollution - water that flows along roads and other paved areas carry pollutants into storm drains. This polluted water travels untreated to local streams and rivers. Surface runoff - water that flows along the ground that is not absorbed because either the soil is saturated or the surface is impervious (e.g. concrete). Watershed - an area of land where all the water within it flows into a particular river or set of rivers. Typical Indoor Water Use Water conservation - using less water by reducing waste. At home, we don’t just use water for drinking. We use Water sustainability - using water in a way that helps ensure water to cook, flush toilets, take showers and baths, wash future water needs are met and its quality is protected. clothes and dishes. 35% Showers and baths 30% Toilet flushing Most of the 1.1 billion people lacking access to clean 20% Laundry water use just 5 litres of unsafe water each day – less than 10% Kitchen and drinking what we use to flush a toilet. 5% Brushing teeth and washing hands ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –1– Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Water Principles of Water (from Water Stewardship: A Guide for Teachers, Students, and Community) Cities and communities use either ground water or surface water for their drinking water supply. 1. Water is essential for life. All plants and animals (including us) could not survive without it. On average, our bodies are 60% water. 2. Water is unique. Water can be a solid, a liquid, or a gas. Liquid water can dissolve many things. 3. All the world’s water forms the water cycle. Water moves through this cycle and some water changes from one form to another. For example, water can change from liquid, to gas (vapour), and back to liquid. Water can remain in one form for short or long periods of time. For example, water may remain solid (ice and snow) for thousands of years. 4. Streams, lakes, and rivers are part of larger systems known as watersheds. A watershed is an area that drains all precipitation it receives as runoff or as groundwater into a particular river or set of rivers. The watershed is defined by the landscape where water moves towards a common river. 5. People use water for more than drinking. In one way or another, water is a part of almost everything we make or do. The largest use of water in British Columbia is by industry (40%), followed by agricultural (28%), municipal (25%), rural domestic (5%), and mining (2%). (Environment Canada) 6. Water is limited. Many parts of Canada, particularly in cities where most people live, have limited water resources. Between 1994 and 1999 one in four Canadian municipalities reported water shortages because of increases in demand, drought or limitations of supply systems. (Environment Canada 2002). 7. Water supports life. Many different types of plants and animals live in the oceans, seas, rivers, lakes and streams for all or part of their lives. For example, salmon live part of their life in the ocean and return to the rivers they were born to spawn. 8. Water pollution has an impact. When water is polluted, some species will die or have to move to another area. Even small amounts of pollutants can travel through the water for a long time, for long distances and affect large areas. For example, one drop of motor oil can contaminate one million drops of water. Students in Action Destination Conservation - KLO Middle School This team made reducing water use at their school one of their goals for the year. They worked with the custodian to install 1-litre plastic bottle in the 33 toilet reservoirs at our school. The custodian wasn’t too sure about the project at first, but he made it possible to get started. The results will reduce water use for years to come. This team also adopted a stream as part of a community clean up. They completed 150 good actions for the planet and earned ‘Jade Status’ as a GREEN SCHOOL from SEEDS. For example, they wrote letters to elected officials and asked for more parks and support for an ‘Endangered Species Act’ for British Columbia. The school finished third in the City of Kelowna Eco-Challenge. Their next quest is completing even more projects and earning ‘Emerald Status.’ For information, contact Destination Conservation at www.dcplanet.ca ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –2– Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Water Water through Time The water we depend on today is the same water that living things used in the past and others will depend on in the future. By caring for water, we help protect it for plants and animals of the future. Water Moves When enough heat (or energy) is added to ice, it melts. When enough heat is added to water, it evaporates. Evaporation turns liquid water into a gas, called water vapour. When water vapour cools enough, the water condenses. Condensation turns water vapour into a liquid. When liquid water cools enough, it freezes to become ice. The movement of water from one form to another is part of the water cycle (hydrologic cycle). Water from oceans, lakes, swamps, rivers, plants, and even the water within you, can evaporate. When water vapour condenses, clouds form. Precipitation comes from About 97% the world’s water is salt water from oceans. 2% is freshwater that is locked up in glaciers and icecaps, while the remaining 1% is freshwater found mostly under ground and a small fraction of this is found in lakes and rivers. clouds as rain, snow or hail and is either absorbed into the ground or runs off into rivers. Some water in the ground is used by plants. And, plants lose some water vapour that enters the atmosphere. Rivers, ponds, lakes, or oceans also contribute water to the atmosphere through evaporation. As a cycle, water moves through different places in different forms, and at different rates. Ground water is a part of the water cycle, even though it can’t be seen as easily as rivers, lakes and clouds. This water flows through spaces in soil and rock through underground lakes and rivers while some eventually seeps to the surface into streams, lakes, and oceans. Groundwater can be reached by digging a well and it is a great source of drinking water for many communities and cities. However, in the Okanagan Valley, some communities use water from lakes, known as surface sources. In Canada, outdoor uses can double water use. In the Okanagan Valley, water use is FIVE times higher in summer than in winter. The water supply and the pipes to carry it need to be built big enough to meet this demand, even though it’s only for a few short weeks in the summer. The lawn watering factor. Lawns use more water than we do. A typical sprinkler uses 1,300 litres of water per HOUR! That’s as much water as one Canadian, on average, uses for drinking, bathing and toilet flushing in about a week. While only a fraction of water is used for drinking, it is all treated to drinking water standards, even if it is used to water lawns. Lawns only need 2.5 cm of water (including rain) a week to stay green. Keep the grass a little longer (at least 6 cm) to shade roots and reduce evaporation. Or, you can choose a brown lawn as another way to be green! ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –3– Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Water Watersheds No matter where you live, work or play, you are ALWAYS in a watershed. A watershed includes all of the water (ponds, lakes, rivers, streams, wetlands, and groundwater) and all of the land that drains into a common area. For example, all the land that surrounds a creek (mountains, houses, forests, farms, businesses, etc.) and all of the creeks and ponds that contribute water to this creek are part of its watershed. Watersheds supply water, drinking water, a place to live, habitat for wildlife and aquatic life, irrigation, industry, recreation, and beauty. You don’t see all the water in a watershed. A large portion of water is stored in the ground. Wells allow people to access groundwater. Rain and water from lakes and rivers flows into the ground recharging lost groundwater. The area where groundwater is stored is called the water table. In wet areas the water table will be closer to the surface and in dry areas it will generally be further from the surface and harder to access. Water and Power Generation The main use of water in Canada is for hydroelectric power generation. We have diverted more water by damming rivers for hydro than any other country, with massive effects on ecosystems and communities. 85 per cent of the drainage basins in the Boreal Shield have been altered by hydroelectric development one way or another with major dams, reservoirs and rivers with flows that are either higher or lower than they would be otherwise. About 60% of Canada’s freshwater drains north, while 84% of our population lives within 300 kilometres of our southern border. Storm Drains A lot of people think that storm drains go to a sewage treatment plant (if your community has one), and are surprised that they flow directly into local watersheds. The Yellow Fish Road program is a nation-wide pollution-awareness program in which Yellow Fish are painted on or near storm drains to remind people that whatever goes into the storm drain will eventually affect the fish in the nearby stream, river, and ocean. Reduce storm drain pollution. • Limit the use of household hazardous products. • Dispose of harmful products properly, • Repair fluid leaks on vehicles. • Reduce or eliminate the use of fertilizers and pesticides. • Wash vehicles on grass or gravel, rather than on pavement or use a car wash (where water is treated). ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –4– Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Water Water and Agriculture Water is used to grow fruits, vegetables and crops to feed farm animals. About 70% of the water used in irrigation is consumed. This means that water is used and does not return to the water system afterwards. The Okanagan watershed is almost 200 kilometres long and covers 21,600 square kilometers, Okanagan Lake is one of many smaller lakes and rivers that make up this watershed. The Okanagan Valley was carved out by glaciers. When the glacier retreated approximately 10,000 years ago, the basin filled with water. While it appears to have a lot of water, the Okanagan Basin is considered one of the driest watersheds in Canada. It’s capacity is unusable. The true volume of water available from Okanagan Lake is the amount that flows through the Okanagan Channel. Lowering the lake past that point will destroy the Okanagan River. Only a small portion of the water in our lakes and aquifers is renewed each year from rainfall and snow melt. Wetlands Fresh water wetlands are found all over the world in lowland areas or along rivers, lakes, and streams. Some wetlands are temporary and seasonal. They occur for a few weeks at a time and then disappear until they are refilled with water. Other wetlands are always under water. How are wetlands important? Almost 25 percent of the world’s wetlands are found in Canada, and nearly 70 percent have vanished already. Wetlands are among the most fertile and productive ecosystems on earth. They provide: • habitat for fish and wildlife, • spawning and nursery areas for young fish, • improvements to the quality of water for aquatic species in nearby lakes and rivers, • hundreds of species of birds, especially waterfowl and other water birds, with a place unavailable elsewhere for part of their life cycles, • surface water with the ability to filter pollutants, • flood control by storing large amounts of melting snow and runoff, • erosion control as plants, called emergents, are able to slow the flow of water, • a water source for agriculture, especially livestock producers, • economic activities such as hunting and trapping activities for rural and remote areas, • carbon ‘sinks’ for climate change by reducing impact of greenhouse gas emissions. In Canada, found only in British Columbia mainly in the Okanagan Valley. The Great Basin Spadefoot Toad is at risk in British Columbia because of the loss of wetlands from urbanization, agriculture and a reduced water table. HOW DO WE PAY FOR THE WATER WE USE? ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –5– Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Water Water and Climate Change Water sustainability is being impacted by Climate Change. As global temperatures go up, BC’s growing season will be longer and dryer while our winter season will be wetter. This means that the water is not available when it is needed most, during the long, hot summer months. It also means that water storage levels will be replaced earlier by snow melt or rainfall, when water storage levels are usually already high. Sustainable Action WHAT CAN WE DO TO CONSERVE & PROTECT WATER? The key to water sustainability includes ensuring we value water, today and for future generations. Solutions include: planting drought tolerant crops, irrigating efficiently, and choosing water efficient appliances. Every drop we save means more available for us and the environment when it is needed. There are a number of things we can do to take care of our watersheds and be more water-smart. Quite simply: use less water! This involved things such as: • turning of taps • having short showers instead of baths • capturing rain water to use in your garden • installing low-flow shower heads and toilets. But where is it that we could really save the most water? When thinking about water conservation we need to look at the difference between water that we NEED (like drinking and bathing), and water that we WANT, but don’t need (like hot tubs, swimming pools, and green lawns). Other ideas for taking action on water conservation: • Plant (native) trees near streams – they help hold banks in place, and keep water running clean. • Don’t put anything toxic down your drains – it all leads to our watersheds and oceans. • Lobby government for sewage treatment, water management, and safe drinking water. • Drink your tap water! Bottled water uses more resources (packaging and shipping) and it isn’t any safer than what comes out of your tap! ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –6– Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Climate Change C limate Change is a topic you may have seen in newspapers, in a textbook, or even in a few movies. Scientists from around the world have been studying an observed increase in average global temperatures, and from their work we have learned that human activity is increasing the greenhouse gases in our atmosphere. This is causing some unpredictable weather patterns that are leading to all kinds of instability in our environment. Vocabulary What is Happening? Carbon Dioxide (CO2) - a colourless, odourless gas that is made of 2 oxygen atoms and one carbon atom. It is formed during respiration, combustion of carbon-based fuels and the decomposition of organic materials. Volcanoes also naturally contribute CO2. Increases in the level of CO2 is considered to have the greatest impact on our Earth’s climate today, as it accounts for an estimated 60% of the greenhouse effect. Our climate is changing: global temperatures have been climbing steadily at a historically significant rate over the past 200 years, Why? The increase in the rate of change has been linked to human activities that have increased the amount of greenhouse gases, changing the makeup of our atmosphere and how it interacts with the Sun’s energy. So now…the question is: How will Climate Change affect the world? and… What can we do about it? Average temperatures have climbed 0.8 degree Celsius around the world since 1880, much of this in recent decades. Arctic ice is rapidly disappearing, and the region may have its first completely ice-free summer by 2040 or earlier. Polar bears and indigenous cultures are already suffering from the sea-ice loss. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND Climate - is patterns of variables, including weather, temperature, and precipitation, averaged over long periods of time. Weather changes from day to day; however climate tend to remain stable and therefore predictable. Climate Change -increased changes to weather patterns over a period of time. Climate change is used interchangeably to describe both human-created and natural changes in weather patterns. Global Warming - the increase in the earth’s surface, atmosphere and ocean temperatures. Greenhouse Effect - the natural process whereby greenhouse gases trap solar radiation in the atmosphere to insulate our earth and stabilize temperatures. Greenhouse Gases (GHGs) - gases in the atmosphere that absorb and re-emit radiation. Some of these gases include carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and fluorinated gases. Methane (CH4) - a colourless, odorless gas formed by the decay of natural materials and can also be found naturally in pockets beneath the earth’s surface. This gas is often called natural gas. It is considered a greenhouse gas. Nitrous Oxide - a colourless, non-flammable gas. It is produced naturally in soils through microbial processes. Emissions of N20 have increased mainly because of agricultural activities, including the use of nitrogen fertilizers. –1– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Climate Change A Layered Envelope The Earth has 4 distinct zones of atmosphere. But it is the lowest zone that reaches the earth’s surface that is responsible for most of the weather. This zone is evenly made of the gases listed below. The gases are stirred by strong winds across the entire planet. The gases that make up our lower atmosphere are: 78.08% Nitrogen (N2) 20.94% Oxygen (02) 0.93% Argon (Ar) 0.03% Carbon (CO2) 0-4% Water vapour 40 other trace elements The Earth’s Natural Greenhouse Effect • The Earth’s natural greenhouse effect ensures the life-sustaining global average temperature of +15° Celsius; without it, the Earth would be a chilly -18° Celsius. • The greenhouse effect is a result of the interactions between energy from the Sun, gases in the atmosphere, and the Earth’s surface. • Roughly 30% of the energy from the Sun is reflected back out to space by clouds, gases, snow, ice, lakes, and oceans as it moves through the atmosphere to the Earth. • Of the remaining solar radiation, 20% is absorbed by the atmosphere (i.e., gases and clouds) and 50% is absorbed by and warms dark areas on the surface of the Earth (i.e., the upper layers of lakes, oceans, the soil, rocks, grasslands, and forests) • Greenhouse gases naturally occur in the atmosphere. They trap heat reflected or emitted from the earth or oceans in the lower atmosphere. Increasing the level of these greenhouse gases is linked to increases of global temperature. In Balance: The Carbon Cycle Our Earth is all about balance. Looking at Earth from space reveals the perspective of earth as a living system, made up of millions of parts all working together. The carbon cycle works much the same way as the water cycle. Carbon exists in many places on the Earth and is transferred over time from one form to another. Carbon, in the form of CO2, occurs naturally in the atmosphere and is used by plants in a process called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis uses the Sun’s energy to break apart CO2 into oxygen and carbon based sugar. This carbon rich sugar provides the building blocks of plants including tree trunks. Burning wood is a chemical reaction where carbon in the wood mixes with oxygen in the air to remake CO2. Since the Industrial Revolution about 200 years ago, human activities have emitted a large amount of carbon in a very short period of time, making the natural sequestration of carbon through photosynthesis too slow for the carbon cycle to stay in balance. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –2– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Climate Change What is accelerating Climate Change and increasing global temperatures? Humans and their activities are believed to be the main reason climate change is occurring so rapidly. In particular, it is the production and burning of fossil fuels that appears to have the biggest impact. These fuels contain carbon. Burning them makes carbon dioxide gas. Since the early 1800s, when people began burning large amounts of coal and oil, the amount of carbon dioxide in the earth’s atmosphere has increased by nearly 30%, and average global temperature appears to have risen between .6° C and 1°C. The amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) now by far exceeds the natural range of atmospheric carbon dioxide over the last 650,000 years. The same is true for methane (CH4) from agricultural activities, large landfills, and fossil fuel use. Additionally,the use of nitrogen-based fertilizers and the production of chemicals with a nitrogen base have led to an increase in nitrous oxide concentrations. As we know, plants (trees especially!) absorb carbon dioxide. When forests are cleared for farmland, human settlements, and other purposes, less CO2 is removed from the atmosphere. More forest is better for combating climate change! HOT TOPICS How does higher CO2 affect the water cycle? Where does our CO2 go? The water cycle may also speed up climate change. With higher temperatures more water evaporates and becomes water vapour. Water vapour effectively traps heat in the lower atmosphere and is listed as a powerful Greenhouse Gas. A concern raised by some scientists is that as global temperatures rise, water vapour may speed up global warming and contribute to climate change. Plants and soil absorb about 1/3 of it, and ocean surface waters absorb about ¼. The rest stays in our air. How do we cause CO2 emissions? 80% is from burning fossil fuels (in factories, our vehicles, and for heating and powering our homes). The rest is from cutting down forests, (especially the clearing and burning of forests in tropical regions), organics in landfills and other land changes. How does CO2 contribute to the Greenhouse Effect? It absorbs some of the heat coming off Earth’s surface (after it’s been warmed by the sun’s rays) trapping heat in the lower atmosphere. Have CO2 levels ever been as high as they are now? Yes, according to really old air bubbles found in Antarctic ice, levels were as high as they are today more than 800,000 years ago. How much CO2 is too much? No one is sure. Many scientists think we are already beyond the safe level of CO2 in our atmosphere and we need to bring it to a lower level to avoid serious climate changes. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –3– Taken from: http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/ global-atmospheric-concentration-of-co2 What if we stop increasing emissions – will that make a difference? It WILL make a difference! If we continue at our current rate of CO2 emissions, our atmosphere will continue to heat up. If we lower our emissions, the rate of heating will decrease. What can we do? There’s lots we can do! See the Sustainable Action section on the last page!!! Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Climate Change The Montreal Protocol: Canada’s Success In the 1980s Canada was a leading proponent of the Montreal Protocol to halt the production of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). CFCs were used historically in refrigerators, air conditioners and industrial applications. Source located http://www.water.ca.gov/climatechange Although the main reason for banning CFCs was due to their depletion of the ozone layer, CFCs are also a potent greenhouse gas. The warming effect or CFCs range from 3000 to 13000 times that of carbon dioxide. What impacts can Climate Change have? • average higher global temperatures • glacier and snow pack decline • crop yield reduction • extreme weather • sea level rise • species extinction • human displacement As climate change occurs, not every day or every place will be warmer. But on average most places will be warmer. Even if a higher average temperature doesn’t seem like a big change, it can cause changes in the amount and pattern of rain and snow, the length of growing seasons, in the frequency and severity of storms, and the height of sea level. What else? We’re not really sure what else will happen. Once patterns start changing, it is bound to change other patterns that humans won’t have control over. What about Canada? As a cold northern country, Canada will experience the impacts of global climate change. For instance, temperatures are rising, particularly in the Arctic. Permafrost is thawing and the ocean’s ice cover is shrinking. Rising temperatures won’t affect everyone the same way. Northern regions will experience more extreme temperature changes, and the Atlantic region is actually expected to cool slightly! Some areas of Canada will experience drought more significantly and overall, weather events are predicted to be more frequent and extreme. Credit: www.kewlwallpapers.com ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –4– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Climate Change Impact of Climate Change in British Columbia British Columbia is already facing the consequences of climate change. Temperatures in the BC Interior have increased by more than 1°C in the past 100 years – that’s more than two times the global average! While 1°C doesn’t seem like much from one day to the next, it makes a big difference over time. It means we get less frost, that more of our glaciers are melting, and that more of our rivers are drying out. This makes a big difference to BC ecosystems. As climate change continues, you can expect the following in BC: • potential spread of pests like the Mountain pine beetle • loss of habitats, especially for migratory birds along shorelines • increase in the number and severity of storms • potential decline in river levels, threatening salmon stocks • increased potential of forest fires • a increase in smog levels • sea levels to rise, threatening coastal communities • potential threats to human health due to food shortages, spread of diseases, and natural disasters Large scale agriculture plays a part in climate change. In order to raise beef cattle, a great deal of energy goes into feeding them (through clearing land, growing the feed, and often transporting the feed). Cattle also add methane to the atmosphere (from their burps!), they are transported for slaughter, and then shipped to markets around the world. That is a lot of emissions. Aerial view of extensive attack by mountain pine beetle. Photo by Lorraine Maclauchlan, Ministry of Forests, Southern Interior Forest Region What is a carbon footprint? Your carbon footprint is the sum of all CO2 emissions that are directly and indirectly associated with your activities. What about BC’s carbon footprint? By 2020, B.C. will reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 33 per cent, compared to 2007 levels. In addition, legally binding targets are set for 2012 and 2016, at six per cent and 18 per cent compared to 2007 levels, respectively. A meat-eater on a bicycle has a larger carbon footprint... ...than a vegetarian in a small car. What can we do instead? Buy local meat, or eat less meat (just one or two days a week perhaps), or go vegetarian. And keep riding that bicycle! ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –5– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Climate Change Sustainable Action What can we do about climate change? Now that we know what causes climate change, what its impacts are, what can we do about it? We can start by assessing our own behaviour to help mitigate climate change (and slow down its effects). As well as help our environment cope with current changes. Get to work! • Calculate your carbon footprint www.livesmartbc.ca/calc/. • Explore sustainable transportation options- ride your bike, take the bus, walk. • Change the way you eat- eat less meat and dairy. Eat local, organic, and/or fair trade foods. • Investigate the energy efficiency of your home/school/work- switch to energy-saving compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFL’s), lower the heat, and/or conserve water. • Go for Green Energy: fund raise for a solar hot water heater for your school; lobby your government for green and sustainable energy infrastructure development; check out solar panel stoves for your next camping trip. • Compost and create a food garden at home. • Support protected natural areas, including intact forest ecosystems, like the Flathead River Valley, the Great Bear Rainforest and the Peace River Valley for their value in absorbing CO2. Cooking with solar power! How is this connected to climate change? About half the people on Earth, primarily in developing countries, cook using wood fires. In fact 45% of the world’s wood is used as cooking fuel, and burning wood creates carbon dioxide. Cutting down forests is not always good for the environment (they absorb carbon dioxide!), and in many regions, there isn’t enough wood for everyone. The earth traps some of the sun’s rays to warm up the land and grow plants, and we can capture sun for our own use too. It’s called solar power. You can capture the sun’s rays by making your own solar cooker. One solar cooker can save at least one whole tree all by itself, each year. www.solarcooking.org/plans/collapsible-box.htm Look at the other Environmental Mind Grind packages for tips on how you can help prevent climate change. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –6– (from Teaching About Climate Change: Cool Schools Tackle Global Warming, edited by Tim Grant and Gail Littlejohn, 2001) Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Forests F orests provide us with so much - they give off oxygen, store carbon, provide food, absorb pollutants, filter water, help to conserve energy, mitigate climate change, and provide us with innumerable other resources. Forests cover almost two-thirds of British Columbia, and are important to everyone for oxygen, for wildlife, for healthy waterways, for jobs, and for fun! Vocabulary Allowable Annual Cut - the rate of timber harvest permitted each year from a specified area of land. Conservation - making use of resources so that people and the environment will be able to use the same resources in the future. Conifer - an evergreen tree that produces cones. BC’s Forest Regions Type of Forest Dominant species Coast Western redcedar, Western hemlock, Sitka spruce, Douglas fir Boreal (subalpine) Engelmann spruce, Alpine fir, Lodgepole pine Connectivity - parts of land connected to others, allowing species to travel between different regions, encouraging genetic diversity. Disturbance - an event such as a fire, disease epidemic, insect infestation, harvesting, or weather event (such as wind or drought) that disrupts the natural cycles in the forest and causes change in habitat, or loss of species. Ecosystems - a functional unit consisting of all the living organisms in a given area, and all the non-living physical and chemical factors of their environment, linked together through nutrient cycling and energy flow. Forest Canopy - the more or less continuous cover of branches and foliage formed by adjacent trees. Forest Succession - the gradual replacement of one specific community by another in an ecosystem following disturbance such as fire, flood, or harvesting. E.g. A burned field is replaced by small saplings which is in turn replaced by fully grown trees, which is replaced by a full forest. Montane Douglas fir, Lodgepole pine, Ponderosa pine, Trembling aspen Grasslands Trembling aspen, Willow Harvesting - the removal of organism (trees, plants, animals) from the forest for use as food or products such as lumber. Columbian Western red cedar, Western hemlock, Douglas fir Interconnectedness - the concept that many elements, organisms, and events connect together through systems. Tundra mosses, lichen, Labrador tea Over-harvesting - gathering an un-sustainable amount of an organism from an ecosystem, so that the ecosystem may not be able to recover. Sustainable - capable of being sustained, of continuing in the future with minimal environmental damage. Timber - wood suitable for building houses, ships, etc., whether cut or still in the form of trees. Wildlife Corridor - Bands of vegetation, usually older forest connecting one fragmented forest patch to the next, to enable wildlife to move from one space to another. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –1– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Forests Forests in BC About 96 percent of the forested land in the province is coniferous, representing approximately half of Canada’s total softwood forest. British Columbia’s topography and climate divides the province into two distinct forest regions: the Coast and Interior. Coastal forests contain more hemlock than any other species, while pine, spruce and fir are the major interior species. Why does BC have so many forest Ecosystems? Trees need certain amounts of moisture, nutrients and sunlight. Some trees can grow just about anywhere. For example, the lodgepole pine isn’t particularly picky about where it lives; it occurs on the mild, rainy coast, as well as in the hot, dry Interior. It can grow where the soil is very dry and poor in nutrients or where the soil is very rich and moist. The one thing lodgepole pine cannot do without is sunlight. Other trees are more demanding and will grow only in certain parts of the province. Some trees are very particular about the amount of nutrients and moisture they receive. For example, the Arbutus is found only in southern coastal areas within a few kilometres of the ocean, where the climate is mild in the winter and the summers are warm. It likes to grow in dry areas, such as on rocky outcrops. The Arbutus also prefers to grow where there is plenty of sunlight. Because trees, other plants, and animals vary in their ability to tolerate environmental conditions, we see a variety of ecosystems throughout the province, from lush coastal rain forests to dry, open grasslands and subalpine areas. Coastal Rain Forest While most of BC receives an average of about 300 milimetres of rain a year, BC’s temperate rainforest gets between 200 and 300 centimetres! The rain and the mild temperatures enable trees to grow big and to grow fast. The temperate rainforest holds more biomass than any other ecosystem on the planet. A temperate rainforest is different than a tropical rainforest because of its location and temperature. Tropical rainforests, located close to the equator, are obviously much warmer, while temperate rainforests are found farther away from the equator, as in BC. Ponderosa Pine Ecosystem Ponderosa pine is a conifer that occurs in moist and dry forests throughout southern BC. Natural wildfires historically burned through most ponderosa pine forests, leaving in their wake a wide variety of species that evolved through forest succession. Northern BC Forest The northern forests of BC consist of spruce, pine and fir. Dominating these forests are two species of White Spruce and Engelmann Spruce. Engelmann cones are papery and flexible with wavy-edged and pointed scales. White Spruce are stiffer with rounded smooth-edged scales. Ponderosa pine ecosystems supports wildlife ranging from small birds like the Clark’s nutcracker and other small animals like the Pygmy chipmunk all the way up to large herbivores like Mule and White-tailed deer, Bighorn sheep, and Rocky Mountain elk. Raptors (eagles and hawks), snakes, rabbits, and bats are also inhabitants of this zone. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –2– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Forests Forest Fires Each year in BC there is an average of 2500 forest fires. 48% are human-caused, and 52% caused by lightning strikes. Many BC residents live in fire interface areas, and although most fires occur far from populated areas, some threaten and occasionally burn homes. Some things to do to be fire smart around the home: The natural role of wildfires. • If you have a bonfire or campfire, make SURE it is completely extinguished before leaving the scene. Forest landscapes change naturally over time, and wildfires are a natural occurrence. Periodic burns can contribute to overall forest health. Fires typically burn lower branches and dead wood on forest floors which kick-starts regeneration by providing ideal growing conditions. Many tree species have evolved to take advantage of fire. Fires also improves floor habitat for many species that prefer relatively open spaces. • Make sure cigarettes are disposed carefully. • Remove leaf clutter and dead and overhanging branches. • Store firewood away from the house. • Use care when refueling garden equipment. • Store and use flammable liquids properly. ** Homeowers FireSmart Manual BC Edition Terrace Mountain Fire The 2009 fire on Terrace Mountain, just outside of Kelowna, covered a total of 8858 hectares, with approximately 15% being within the Fintry Provincial Park and Protected Area. Over 300 kilometers of fire guards were built during the fighting of the fire. These fire guards have now been rehabilitated, a process that loosens compacted soils, re-establishes the natural drainage patterns of streams and rivers, and grass seeds areas where soil erosion is of concern. Approximately 1/3 of the area had been logged before, and the area affected by the fire is scheduled to be replanted in 2011 and 2012. The fire had a huge impact on forestry initiatives and the local economy, and although it is common to salvage wood from fired-affected areas, wood with charcoal bits can not be used for pulp or paper uses. How are forest fires put out? Wildfires that are not left to burn themselves out, are extinguished by firefighters on the ground and in the air. On the ground, firefighters fight with pick axes and hoses and shovels, while from the air, they drop water, chemical retardants, or firefighting gels. Sometimes firefighters set a backfire, which is a fire that has been deliberately set as a way to remove wood fuel and monitored and controlled very carefully to keep it from spreading. Once it has burned, it reduces the chances of a wildfire burning through that area. What makes it so hard to put out a forest fire? • Thick forest canopies can act like umbrellas, sheltering flames from water on the forest floor, and even if burning trees are put out, smouldering root systems can unexpectedly flare up in the coming days. • Relative humidity, temperature, wind speed, and wind direction are all factors that affect a fire’s behaviour– and they change from moment to moment. White • The topography Spruce of an area also can affect how difficult it is to put out a fire. For example, north-facing slopes are cooler and wetter, while south-facing slopes are drier and hotter, influencing how the fire burns. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –3– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Forests Forestry in BC Forestry is a key driver of the economy – 15% of BC’s economy depends on it! Forest companies directly employ 65,000 people. For the past ten years, the average total timber harvest in BC has been 77 million m3 per year. Of the 77 million m3, 68 million m3 per year (89%) were from forests where harvest levels are regulated by government-determined Allowable Annual Cuts (AAC). The remaining 9 million m3 per year (11%) were from lands with no government-set AACs, primarily private land and some public land. BC’s Forest and Range Practices Act outlines objectives for many forest values, including soil conservation, reforestation, stream protection, fish and fish habitat, watersheds, biodiversity, range, aboriginal culture, recreation, timber, tourism and wildlife which must be met. Under the Act, forest companies are required to develop forest stewardship plans that outline how they will meet environmental requirements. They also must reforest an area with native species suited to the local ecology of the area. BC has roughly the same amount of forested area as it did before European settlement. Only 2% of the province’s land has been permanently converted to other uses such as farming, ranching and urban development. Each year, about 200 million seedlings are planted in British Columbia to reforest areas after logging, wildfire or insect infestations. Timber Forest Products Several varieties of trees are harvested for timber in BC and include, but are not limited to: Douglas fir, Pine, Spruce, Hemlock, Cedar, and Balsam and Amabalis firs. Hemlock and Fir Lodgepole pine Western redcedar The two species comprising the Pacific Coast Hemlock group are western hemlock and amabilis fir. They grow in mixed stands throughout the coastal and interior wet belt forests in British Columbia extending from Alaska southward. One of the most widespread conifers found in the province is lodgepole pine. Western redcedar is British Columbia’s official tree. It is is found on BC’s coast and in the Interior wet belt. It is also referred to as ‘arborvitae’ or ‘tree of life’. Aboriginal people used its wood for constructing housing, totem poles, and crafted into many objects, including masks, utensils, boxes, boards, instruments, canoes, vessels, and ceremonial objects. Roots and bark were used for baskets, ropes, clothing, blankets and rings. Hemlock and Fir are one of the primary sources of lumber for home construction, used for mouldings, flooring, panelling, doors and door components, window components, staircase components, ladder stock, finished boards, and veneer. The cones of lodgepole pines need fire or heat to melt the resin in their cones and release the seeds. Seeds can stay on the ground for many years until there are suitable growing conditions. Western redcedar is currently used for house siding, outdoor furniture, decking, fencing, and roof shakes. Lodgepole pine is used for plywood, paneling, furniture, doors, windows, fence posts, and railway ties. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –4– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Forests Non-Timber Forest Products Pine Beetle Epidemic! Timber is not the only resource that forests have to offer. Many plants and mushrooms that grow in BC’s forests have been harvested and used for thousands of years, and play a role in BC culture and economy. Many local products (like pine mushrooms) are now being sold internationally, bringing business to rural areas in BC. Species from the forest other than timber-wood are often called Non-Timber Forest Products, which have cultural, spiritual, recreational, commercial, and subsistence value. One of the most important forest health issues currently affecting BC’s interior forests is the mountain pine beetle, with the potential to devastate up to 80% of the pine stands. Impacts include: • timber loss • environmental concerns • negative economic impacts Significant infestations of Western pine beetle can also be found in southern BC’s ponderosa pine stands. Isolated infestations of other forest pests can also be found throughout the province. Some examples include chanterelle and pine mushrooms, blackberries, huckleberries, Labrador tea, salal, sword fern, and cedar. Adult beetles search for mature pines in July and August, and bore into the thin outer bark. This stimulates the tree to produce pitch to try to fight the insect – the easiest way to look for affected trees is to look for pitch. Most trees can not fight off the aggressive insects, and beetles can infest entire areas in just one season. In the spring, the larvae mature, and fly off to find other healthy trees. Salal. Blackberries Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) is placebased knowledge that people learn to adapt to their own environment through interactions, observations and experiences with their ecological system. It is established through years of living in an ecosystem, and is passed down from generation to generation. TEK is important for species and ecosystems, because it often holds the key to the balance between harvesting and overharvesting, and addressing the balance between human needs and overall ecosystem needs. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND Epidemics usually occur during drought periods when trees are stressed, and after warmer winters, when the cold hasn’t killed off many larvae. Pine beetle lives here naturally, however because of warmer winters and our vast, mature pine forests, this epidemic is lasting longer than other recorded outbreaks. So how is BC responding? BC is responding to the pine beetle epidemic by salvaging beetle-killed timber before its value is lost and reforesting harvested areas, as well as working to find new markets and products for the beetle wood and targeting sawmill and forest harvest waste for potential bioenergy projects. Pine Beetle Wood Used at the Olympics The roof of the Richmond Oval, site of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games Speed Skating events includes one million board feet of B.C. pine beetle lumber. The distinctive feature of the Richmond Oval is its unique “wood wave” roof. This roof is one of the longest clear spans in North America. The salvaged beetle wood is linked together in undulating sections to create a beautifully rippled effect. The Oval was given an award of excellence in architectural innovation by the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada specifically for the innovative use of beetle-killed lumber in its ceiling. –5– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Forests Forests and Climate Change Climate change and forests are linked. On the one hand, changes in global climate are already stressing forests through higher mean annual temperatures, altered precipitation patterns and more frequent and extreme weather events. At the same time, forests and the wood they produce trap and store carbon dioxide, playing a major role in mitigating climate change. However, when destroyed or cleared and burned, forests can become sources of the greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide. Forests store enormous amounts of carbon. The world’s forests and forest soils currently store more than one trillion tons of carbon -- twice the amount found floating free in the atmosphere. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations When fossil fuels are burned they release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, contributing to an atmospheric carbon dioxide increase that, in turn, contributes to global warming and climate change. Trees and forests help alleviate these changes by removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and converting it during photosynthesis to carbon, which they then “store” in the form of wood and vegetation, a process referred to as “carbon sequestration.” Trees are generally about 20 percent carbon by weight and, in addition to the trees themselves, the overall biomass of forests also acts as a “carbon sink.” For instance, the organic matter in forest soils – such as the humus produced by the decomposition of dead plant material -- also acts as a carbon store. When trees are harvested, carbon remains stored in the wood. Destruction of forests, on the other hand, adds almost six billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each year, and preventing this stored carbon from escaping is important for the carbon balance and vital in conserving the environment, the UN agency says. Wood vs Other Materials and Fuels to Combat Climate Change. Using wood used in construction or for furniture effectively stores carbon for centuries. High-energy construction materials used in place of wood, such as plastics, aluminum or cement, typically require large amounts of fossil fuels during manufacturing. Replacing them with wood therefore has additional benefits in terms of reducing carbon emissions. Similarly, the use of wood fuel instead of oil, coal and natural gas, can actually mitigate climate change. Although burning wood and biomass does release carbon dioxide into the air, if those fuels come from a sustainably-managed forest, those carbon releases can be offset by replanting. If managed properly, forests can supply bioenergy virtually without contributing any greenhouse gas to the atmosphere. Sustainable Action What can we do for BC forests? There are a number of things we can do to take care of our forests. We can: • use less paper, and use both sides • borrow books from the library instead of buying new ones • use recycled paper, or paper from sustainably-managed forests • contact your local government to support sustainable forestry practices in local parks and protected areas • be fire-conscious – don’t have any open flames in the forest • learn about traditional uses of forest ecosystems near you • learn about the forests near you – what trees grow there? • stay on marked trails and avoid environmentally what animals live there? what issues exist sensitive areas near streams and waterways there? • learn about Forestry practices near you – are they sustainable? ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –6– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Species & Spaces B ritish Columbia is filled with magnificent species and spaces, some found nowhere else on earth. From sea floor to mountain summit, this region is home to a staggering abundance of natural diversity. The Diversity of Life Vocabulary Our world is made up of a web of life where all species are connected though relationships: • predators and prey Alien Species - also known as Invasive Species, these are species from one part of the world that are introduced to a new area and become established there. • oxygen givers and takers • sun absorbers Biodiversity - the number and variety of any species and ecosystems in a region. • decomposers In general, biodiversity refers to the number and variety of any species and ecosystems in a region. Boreal forest - a forest made up of mostly conifer trees, that stretches across northern Canada from Newfoundland to the Rocky Mountains, as well as from southern grasslands to the arctic tundra. This can mean three things: • how many different types of species there are in an area Connectivity - parts of land connected to others, allowing species to travel between different regions, encouraging genetic diversity. • the differences within a species (between one bald eagle and another) Endangered Species - a species facing a very high risk of extinction in the wild, making them particularly sensitive to human activity. • the variety of ecosystems that make up a larger landscape. Extirpation - a species going extinct in a particular region. Some of the significant species and ecosystems in BC include: Habitat - the location and environmental conditions in which a particular organism normally lives. • endangered Vancouver Island Marmot, not found anywhere else in the world Keystone Species - a species who plays a fundamental role in their ecosystem. • 80% of the world’s Cassin’s Auklets nest in BC Park - an area of land preserved in its natural state that is accessible by the public. • almost all the world’s Mountain Caribou Wildlife Conservation - regulation of wild animals and plants to provide for their success in the future. • more than half the world’s Mountain Goats • temperate rainforests (which are decreasing rapidly elsewhere around the world.) BC has more biodiversity than any other Canadian province or territory—including 35,000 insect species, 488 bird species, 468 fish species, and 142 species of mammals. Did You Know? Three-quarters of Canada’s mammal species are found in BC. 24 of those species are ONLY found in BC. The Endangered Vancouver Island Marmot considered Canada’s most endangered species. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –1– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Species & Spaces What does Endangered mean? An organization called the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) makes a list of all species that are in threat of going extinct or being extirpated. Threatened species are those listed as Critically Endangered, Endangered or Vulnerable. • Critically Endangered: A species facing an extremely high risk of extinction in the wild. • Endangered: A species considered to be facing a very high risk of extinction in the wild. • Vulnerable: A species considered to be facing a high risk of extinction in the wild. BC Species in Danger! The Endangered Burrowing Owl Some of the many species that are in danger of going extinct in BC include: Marbled Murrelet This rare seabird is considered the “most mysterious bird on the Pacific coast” because it is almost never seen on land, although it comes ashore to nest in oldgrowth trees in the interior of BC. The Marbled Murrelet zigzags low over the water like an oversized bumblebee and uses its stubby wings to “fly” underwater. It spends a lot of its time on the water, and carries a meal as much as 70 km from the sea to its nestling every night for a month. Biologists have roughly estimated the BC population at 40 000 to 50 000 birds, but their habitat is threatened because the old growth forest stands in the province are shrinking because of human development and logging. Spotted Owl The Northern Spotted Owl is currently the most endangered bird in Canada. Found exclusively within the southwest forests of BC, it depends on unfragmented old-growth forests to roost, nest and forage. It largely preys upon flying squirrels, deer mice, and other small mammals. Although the Spotted Owl was formerly abundant, it has become an endangered species in both the US and Canada, with fewer than 11 breeding pairs left in Canada because of the fact that over 80% of its habitat has been logged since the 1940s. The remaining owl habitat in BC’s oldgrowth forests has been highly fragmented. Mountain Caribou Caribou are larger than deer and smaller than elk, weighing approximately 150200 kg. Their colouring changes with the seasons between various degrees of brown and grey accentuated by a white collar of fur. Their extra-large hooves act like snowshoes, enabling them to stand on deep, packed snow and reach their primary food source - lichen growing on old-growth trees. In the past decade, the number of mountain caribou has declined by 40% because of changes to their habitat caused by global warming and human-induced habitat changes from logging and mining. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –2– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Species & Spaces Eelgrass These bright-green, ribbon-like leaves are a vital component of BC’s coastal ecosystem. Eelgrass grows in beds and provide habitat for a variety of species of algae, bacteria, sea worms, shrimp, crabs, clams, snails, anemones, sea urchins, and juvenile salmon. Recent research suggests that seagrasses like BC’s Eelgrass provide protection against climate change because they store carbon. Eelgrass beds are destroyed by human activities such as dredging with large machinery along the coast (both in and out of the water). High water temperatures, pollution, excess runoff of fertilizers, and chemicals such as oils, heavy metals, pesticides, or solvents can damage or kill Eelgrass. Tailed Frog These frogs can live up to 15 to 20 years! They do not grab insects with a sticky tongue, instead, because its tongue is attached to the floor of its mouth, it jumps on its prey. These frogs live in cold, clear water, and in BC are found either in the mountain streams on the west coast or in small patches in the southeast corner of BC in the Kootenay area. The Rocky Mountain tailed frogs are endangered because of habitat destruction from roads, logging, and other development. BC Spaces in Danger! BC species depend on our spaces. There are several unique ecosystems in BC that are threatened by human development and climate change. Two of these special spaces include: Antelope-brush Habitat of the Okanagan This grassland has many grasses; sagebrush and different native bunchgrasses such as Bluebunch Wheatgrass, needle-and-thread grass and Sand Dropseed. 68% of South Okanagan antelope-brush habitat has been destroyed since 1938 – it ranks among Canada’s top four endangered ecosystems. The greatest loss has been because of expanding farmland (which takes land and possibly pollutes the area) and growing towns and cities (which takes land and creates roads and other polluters). Garry Oak Woodlands Found on the coast of BC, Garry Oaks are the only native oak trees in western Canada. Garry Oak ecosystems range from shady woodlands to open meadows with scattered trees. Garry Oak trees may be found in mixed stands with other trees, mainly Arbutus and Douglas-fir. Threats are from habitat loss, the land being broken into smaller parts, and invasion of exotic species. An ecosystem is the result of all the biological, climatic, geological and chemical “ingredients” in a particular area. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –3– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Species & Spaces Keystone Species A keystone in a building is that one stone that if you removed it, the entire building could collapse. The same is true about a keystone species. An entire ecosystem could collapse if that one species was extirpated or went extinct. Some examples of keystone species include Pacific salmon, Whitebark pine, and badger, and sea otter. It is possible that we won’t know which species are keystone species until their populations are threatened. http://kelewis.com In Canada, about 5% of mammal species and 27% of plant species are aliens. Aliens in BC? Okay, so maybe not aliens, but alien species. Alien species are plants, animals and microorganisms from one part of the world that are introduced to a new area and become established there. Sometimes they are considered weeds, or called “invasive species”. How Do They Get Here? Likely by humans (not by UFO!). We carry seeds or microorganisms on our shoes when we travel, people want exotic plants in their gardens, or we bring them on boats from one body of water to another. Sometimes introducing alien species is on purpose, but most of the time it’s by accident. Should We Be Concerned? Some of Canada’s alien species are beneficial, but a great number are not. Sometimes the conditions are right for alien species to become invasive—they move into new habitats and take over, their populations sometimes expanding beyond control. The harm they cause to the environment, the economy, or human health can be costly and sometimes irreversible BC Ecosystems that are Vulnerable to Alien Species Invasions 1. Southern Interior Valleys – Grassland Ecosystems have been negatively affected by the introduction of invasive alien species such as Largemouth Bass, Purple Loosestrife and European Starling. 2. Pacific Coastal Islands – These unique coastal ecosystems have been disrupted by herbivores (such as deer and rabbits), and vertebrate and invertebrate predators (including rats, raccoons, and some snails). 3. Eastern Vancouver Island – Garry Oak Meadow Ecosystem is home to 91 species at-risk - it is both biologically rich and very vulnerable, with less than 5% of the original habitat remaining in a near-natural condition. The introduction of European species of animals and plants (like grasses) has had a devastating affect. 4. Freshwater Ecosystems: River and Lake Systems, Wetland Habitats and Coastal Estuaries have a species extinction rate that is five times faster than all other groups of species. Invasive alien species are thought to be the cause of over 70% of this century’s extinctions of native freshwater species. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –4– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Species & Spaces Parks Climate Change A park is an area of land preserved in its natural state that is accessible by the public. Parks are important because they limit development within their boundaries, so species and habitats can thrive naturally. They are also important so that people can experience wild places and get to know the ecosystems that they are a part of. Different parks allow different activities – some are geared for hiking, camping, mountain biking, or picnicking. Effect on Species and Spaces We are already experiencing climate change in British Columbia. Frost seasons have grown shorter, several large glaciers in southern BC retreated, and river levels have changed dramatically in the past decade. Species will respond to these climate changes either by adapting in place, migrating, or going extinct. In BC, there are different types of parks: Some examples of climate change’s impact on BC species and spaces: • Regional park (for example, Glen Canyon Regional Park) • Mountain pine beetle is extending its reach because of changing temperatures and weather patterns; • Provincial park (for example, Okanagan Provincial Park) • An outbreak of needle blight in Lodgepole Pine; • National park (for example, Kootenay National Park) • Earlier arrivals, later departures, and changes in migration patterns of several bird species; Tweedsmuir Provincial Park is BC’s largest provincial park at 989,616 hectares. • Fewer sockeye salmon spawning in rivers because the water is warmer. (reference: Gayton, D.V. (2008). Impacts of Climate Change on British Columbia’s Biodiversity: A Literature Review) The smallest is Memory Island, at less than one hectare. Parks - Coastal British Columbia The thousands of species that live on BC’s coast are linked to each other and the environment around them in all kinds of ways, creating complex and delicate networks that stretch from inland forests to the deep ocean. Like hiking? There are approximately 6,000 kms of hiking trails in BC! Remember: take only pictures, leave only footprints! Strathcona Park was BC’s first provincial park (created in 1911). It contains the 440 metre Della Falls, which is Canada’s highest and one of the ten highest falls in the world. • The world’s largest octopus species ever known, a 272 kg Giant Pacific Octopus, was once found off the B.C. coast. • The Sunflower Star lives here -- one of the world’s heaviest sea stars using over 15,000 sucker feet to capture its prey! • Populations of grey, minke and humpback whales, orcas, dolphins and porpoises make their home along BC’s coast. The coast includes amazing spaces such as: • the Bowie Seamount, an underwater mountain rising from a bottom depth of 3,100 m to a peak of 24 m below the surface over a 1,375 sq km area. • the Hecate Strait Sponge Reefs, which have been growing on the sea floor for 9,000 years! • the Scott Islands with their 2.2 million breeding seabirds from 13 different species, and the waters surrounding the Queen Charlotte Islands. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –5– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Species & Spaces Students in Action Another Species at Risk - The Burrowing Owl The Leadership Ecology Adventure Program offers an exciting opportunity to students who love to be active and are interested in improving their leadership skills. LEAP also encourages students to enhance their understanding of local marine and terrestrial ecology through hands-on field based studies. LEAP is a dynamic and experiential program that focuses on both the hard and soft skills associated with living well and being in the outdoors. During LEAP, students will have countless opportunities to positively interact with each other while creating memories to last a lifetime! It is estimated that 500 to 800 pairs nest in Canada, with approximately half nesting in Saskatchewan. In Saskatchewan the population has declined 94% since the 1980s. In 2004, there were 47 pairs found nesting in Grasslands National Park in Saskatchewan. In 2008 there were only 20 nesting pairs. They had completely disappeared from Manitoba and British Columbia. Now some have been sighted in 2006 and 2007 in Manitoba. The Burrowing Owl has been reintroduced in British Columbia. www.outdoors.sd47.bc.ca/leap.html Operated by the School District 67 as a summer program and available as a credit course to students throughout BC. Sustainable Action What Can We Do For BC Species and Spaces? There are a number of things we can do to take care of our species and spaces. We can: • Visit parks and protected areas – take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints! • Learn about the endangered species in your region, find out what their habitat needs are. • Join organizations who are working to protect species and spaces, like the Okanagan-Similkameen Conservation Alliance and the Garry Oak Ecosystem Recovery Team. • Help restore degraded habitats – plant native species. • Choose products that recognize ecologically-friendly forestry products. Even better: switch to cloth napkins, kitchen towels and handkerchiefs. • Eat non-threatened fish species by using SeaChoice’s Canada Seafood Guide • Do what you can in your yard and neighbourhood – put up bat boxes or birdhouses. “ We have a responsibility to conserve a high percentage of species at risk in British Columbia and Canada . We are uniquely positioned to protect some of the most important grasslands in the province. A functional protected areas network with core protected areas and appropriate landscape linkages and altitudinal corridors can fortunately still be put in place. In a few years it may be too late.” Dr. Geoff Scudder, Professor of Zoology, University of British Columbia ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –6– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Energy W e use energy to heat our homes, drive to school and power our iPods and TVs. This energy is created from a variety of sources, some of which are more harmful to our planet than others. The choices we make on how we use our energy and where we get it from affects the entire planet. Where does my power come from? Vocabulary Atmosphere - a layer of gas surrounding Earth that protects life by absorbing ultraviolet solar radiation, warming the surface through heat retention (greenhouse effect), and reducing temperature extremes between day and night. 93% of the electricity in BC comes from hydroelectric dams. When it rains in the hills and the mountains, the water becomes streams and rivers that run into lakes and oceans. Hydro-electricity is captured through dams. Dams hold some of the river back, so that the water that flows downstream is forced to go through a small area. The force of that water turns something called a turbine, which spins to produce electricity. Climate change - increased changes to weather patterns over a period of time. Climate change is used interchangeably to describe both human-created and natural changes in weather patterns. Energy Conservation - reducing the amount of resources we use to create energy to help protect what we have left. The electricity travels along electric lines to your home and to your school, so when you flick your light switch, voila! Light! Emissions - the release of gases into the atmosphere from some type of human activity (cooking, driving a car, etc). Fossil Fuel - fuels that result from the compression of ancient plant and animal life formed over millions of years. Common fossil fuels are natural gas, oil and coal. Cora Linn Hydro Dam on the Kootenay River near Nelson BC uses flowing water to generate electricity. Geothermal Energy - renewable power extracted from heat within the earth. Greenhouse Gas (GHG) - gases in the atmosphere that absorb and re-emit radiation. Some of these gases include carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and fluorinated gases. Hydroelectricty - hydroelectric energy is generated from the gravitational flow of water. Nonrenewable Energy - nonrenewable energy is energy derived from limited sources of naturally occurring resources that are created through natural processes that take millions of years. Oil - naturally occurring liquid found in rock that is made from dead plants and animals through exposure to heat and pressure in the earth’s crust over millions of years. Renewable Energy - energy that comes from natural sources such as sunlight, wind, rain, tides, and geothermal that can be re-filled through natural processes. Canada has 417 hydroelectricity generating facilities with a total combined installed capacity of 67,689 megawatts. (2009) ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND Solar Energy - the harnessing of radiant light and heat energy from the sun. –1– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Energy Energy is in Everything Since the industrial revolution (about 200 years ago) when we started burning fossil fuels in factories and engines, we’ve made it easier for many people to live on earth using this carbon energy. We’ve become used to using as much energy as we want, but this type of energy will run out unless we conserve energy and start using alternative forms of energy in addition to fossil fuels. All the stuff you have requires energy for it to exist. It will also use energy to be disposed of. We call this the lifecycle of a product. The energy that is used to find the materials to make a product, produce or manufacture it, ship it to be sold, power the building to store and sell it, use it (electronics or other), and finally dispose of it, is referred to as the ‘embodied energy’ of a product. That is the total amount of energy that was part of a product’s lifecycle. Consider that in the past 30 years, 33% of the world’s natural resources have been consumed. That is a lot of energy! We need to be more concerned about the stuff we get, and spend less energy getting stuff. Visit The Story of Stuff website to view the video and learn more about a product’s lifecycle. There are two different sources of energy: nonrenewable and renewable sources. What is the difference? Renewable resources replenish themselves naturally with the passage of time, while nonrenewable resources do not. The average Canadian uses almost 50 times the energy of the average person from Bangladesh! Where Does Canada Get its Energy? 74% of the energy we use is from nonrenewable sources, Total Energy Consumption in Canada by Type (2006) Natural Gas 24% Coal 10% Hydroelectric power 25% Oil 32% ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND EIA International Energy Annual 2006 –2– Nuclear 7% Other Renewables 1% Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Energy Energy Sources in BC Nonrenewable Energy Sources Nonrenewable energy is energy that comes from a limited source, which means if we use them all up, they don’t come back! It took 360 million years to make fossil fuels of today, and if we keep consuming them at today’s rate, we’ll use them all up within 200 years. All fossil fuels are nonrenewable energy resources because although they will be replenished in several million years, we can’t wait around that long for them! Fossil fuels are fossils? When plants, dinosaurs and other animals died millions of years ago, layers of rock and dirt covered their remains - this is how fossils were formed. After many years of being pushed down into deep earth, heat and pressure turned these layers of fossils into natural gas, oil and coal. Oil & Petroleum Petroleum” means “rock-oil”. You can find it in thick liquid form in rocks, formed from the fossils of dead plants and animals, after they’ve been exposed to heat and pressure in deep earth, over millions of years. The oil that is taken from the ground (crude petroleum) can be made into products such as gasoline, diesel fuel, jet fuel, kerosene, plastics, pesticides, fertilizers, lubricants, and more. Coal Coal is a sedimentary rock that is capable of catching fire and burning. It begins as layer upon layer of decomposing plant matter pile up over millions of years, creating enough pressure to turn the plant material into rock. Coal is removed from the earth through mining in either underground or pit mines, and is the largest source of energy for electric power generation in the world. Natural Gas Natural gas comes from deep inside the earth. It burns cleaner than other fossil fuels and is mostly made of methane. As the name implies, it is typically found in a gaseous state. When burned, natural gas releases carbon dioxide and water vapor. It can be used to heat your home or cook your food, and it can also be used for transportation. Oil was discovered in Alberta at Turner Valley in 1914 and in the Northwest Territories at Norman Wells in 1920. The discovery that really started the modern Canadian oil industry was Imperial Leduc #1, which first flowed oil on February 13, 1947 near the town of Leduc, Alberta. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –3– Canada’s coal production in 2008 totalled 68.3 million tonnes. Coal is mined in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Energy Renewable Energy Sources Renewable energy is energy that comes from a natural source such as sunlight, wind, rain, ocean tides, and geothermal. These sources of energy can be replenished over time through natural processes. Sometimes weather and seasons will affect renewable energy sources. For example, we usually receive less rain in the summer than we do in the winter. Hydroelectric Hydroelectric power uses naturally moving water to power a generator to produce electricity. 93% of our electricity in BC is made from Hydroelectric power plant. Geothermal Geothermal means “rock” or “earth” and “heat”, the heat energy that is produced by natural processes inside the earth. Conventional geothermal can be taken from hot springs, pools of hot water deep underground, or by breaking open the rock itself. Such projects use designated plants that are placed in certain areas where temperatures can be found to be over 170°C Energy is created capturing the steam deep in the ground to power turbines that generate electricity. Geothermal Heat pumps operate on a smaller scale to heat or cool a building. Smaller geothermal projects burrow geothermal heat pumps (GHPs) into the Earth at depths from 10ft – 300 ft. The heat pumps use the Earth’s constant temperature to circulate water or other liquids through pipes that are buried in a continuous loop. Solar Energy from the sun can be captured in solar panels and converted into other forms of energy, such as heat or electricity. Solar energy can be used for heating, cooling, cooking, lighting, forcing chemical reactions, water purification, and more! Wind Wind power converts wind into electricity, usually through wind turbines, big towers that capture the wind. Because winds change naturally, the availability of wind power is unpredictable unless power is stored in a battery. There are no greenhouse gases produced in the generation of wind power. Tidal Tidal power is a form of hydro power (because it relies on water) that converts the energy of the tides into electricity. Tidal power is linked to the cycles of the earth and moon and is said to be more reliable than solar and wind. Biomass Biomass energy is the energy stored in non-fossil organic materials such as wood, straw, vegetable oils and wastes from the forest, agricultural and industrial sectors. Biomass energy may be in solid, liquid or gaseous form, permitting a wide range of applications. Biomass produces more than 600 MW of power in British Columbia, mostly for industrial use at pulp and paper mills on Vancouver Island and the British Columbia coast. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –4– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Energy How does a Wind Turbine work? Warm air is less dense than cool air. When warm air contacts cool air, the density difference can cause the warm air to rise. As it rises, cool air flows in to replace the rising air. This is the source of wind. Since air is warmed, either directly or indirectly, by the sun, wind energy can be considered solar energy. The blades of the turbine are shaped in such a way that wind causes them to rotate, which spins a shaft that runs through a generator, creating electricy. Energy at Home The power of the sun! Our homes in British Columbia account for 1/3 of our total greenhouse gas emissions in our province! Every year a huge amount of energy is wasted. You can help save energy by doing simple things like turning off the lights when you leave a room, powering off your video games when you’re done playing, and keeping the windows and doors closed when the air conditioner is running. The earth receives more energy from the sun in one hour than the population of the world uses in an entire year! BATHROOM • Turn off the tap when you brush your teeth. BEDROOM AND LIVING ROOM • Close windows if the heat is on. • Fix leaky taps! A hot water tap, dripping once every second, wastes 720 litres of water per month • Use door ‘socks’ (long, snake-like pieces of material stuffed with sand or birdseed) to stop drafts under doors. • Take showers instead of baths! This can save up to 30L of water each time you wash! HEATING & LIGHTING • Turn off lights when you leave a room. GENERAL • Do a ‘house check’ and look for drafts near window and doors. • Use energy-efficient light bulbs. • Dust off light bulbs. • Keep your garage door closed if the garage is attached to your house. • Leave space and air around your furnace. YARD • Keep outside doors closed • Grow a small vegetable garden and eat some local food! ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –5– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Energy Who knew renewable energy was so cool.... There are a lot of benefits to using renewable energies. From an environmental view, solar, wind and water power are all green power sources. Unlike coal combustion power plants, no harmful exhaust is produced when using alternative energy generators. There is also no worry about toxic or radioactive waste products, like there is with nuclear power. In addition to the lack of emissions and waste products, no valuable resources are “used up” with renewable resource power generation. If every home on earth were powered with an alternative energy system, it would never cause a shortage of wind, water or sunlight. Sustainable Action Save Water, Save Energy? Why does conserving water help conserve energy? One of the biggest uses of electricity in cities and towns goes to treating and supplying water and then cleaning it up after it’s been used. What can we do to use energy sustainably? In order to make the most of Earth’s resources, you can: • Turn off your appliances, video game consoles, computers, monitors, and televisions when you’re not using them • Unplug your chargers when you’re not using them – they use power even when you don’t need them! • Turn off the lights and use energy efficient light bulbs • Wear a sweater instead of cranking up the heat. • Turn the heat down in your home during the day. • Don’t idle. Turn your car off if you’re parked. • Look into alternative energy sources. Check out handheld solar chargers for phones, iPods, phones or laptops. Even easier: use your own power – walk and bike places! Student in Grades 7-11 have a creative edge with eCards. An eCard is an electronic card about energy that you research, write, design and send using eCards. The title, text and image of your eCard form a powerful message that you can deliver to a family member, friend or a politician. Teach others while you learn! Teachers across BC can access these free eCards and other on-line activities for their classes by signing up to Green Learning. Ask your teacher to visit www.greenlearning.ca for more eCard design by Amy Z. information. Henery Kelsey Public School ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –6– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Transportation and Air Quality C aring for the air we breathe is important to our health. We can care for the air by making choices that consider their impact on air pollution. Transportation is one of the largest sources of air pollutants (and GHGs) in British Columbia. As most emissions happen close to where we live and work, they can have a significant impact on our health. We can also be more air aware by learning about other factors that decrease air quality. Air Pollution Air pollution is defined as “too much of any airborne substance that causes harm to people, plants, or animals”. While some air pollution is visible, such as smoke from burning organic material, a lot of the time our air may look clean yet it isn’t. Common examples of pollutants include: dust, wood smoke, nitrogen dioxide, ground-level ozone, and particulate matter. Air pollution can come from many sources, but two of the most common are: Burning - Smoke consists of fine particles and over 100 chemicals, many that are known or suspected to cause cancer. Smoke comes from burning yard waste, tree prunings and stumps, as well as wood heating appliances, campfires, and forest fires. Air pollution from smoke is easy to see and smell. Vehicles - The burning of fossil fuel in vehicles produces particles, ozone, ground level ozone when mixed with sunlight and other toxic gases. Other sources of air pollution in the air shed include: • gas spills or leaks exhaust from lawn mowers, leaf blowers, etc • dust from roadways and development • natural sources (dust, volcanoes, forest fires etc.) • industrial emissions North Americans travel more than 8 trillion kilometers per year on the road and in the air. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND Vocabulary Air Pollutants – toxic particles that vehicles emit into the air, which includes Nitrogen oxides, Fine Particulate Matter, Volatile Organic Compounds, Carbon Monoxide, Sulphur Dioxide, Coolants, and Air Toxics (benzene, 1,3-butadiene, acrolein, formaldehyde and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons). Climate Change - increased changes to weather patterns over a period of time. Climate change is used interchangeably to describe both humancreated and natural changes in weather patterns. Fossil fuels - fuels made up of ancient fossils that have been heated up and transformed into coal, oil, and gas that can then be used in our cars. Greenhouse Gas (GHG) - gases in the atmosphere that absorb and reemit radiation. Some of these gases include carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and fluorinated gases. Green Space - open, undeveloped land with natural vegetation, often available for public use. Photochemical Reaction– a reaction between the sun (photo) and one or more chemicals. Smart Growth - an urban planning and transportation theory that concentrates growth in the center of a city to avoid urban sprawl; and advocates compact, transit-oriented, walkable, bicycle-friendly land use, with neighbourhood and sustainability in mind. Transportation Footprint – the total set of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions caused by modes of transportation. It is often expressed in terms of the amount of carbon dioxide, or its equivalent of other GHGs, emitted. Transportation Demand Management - policies, programs, services and products that influence transportation options to make travel behaviours more sustainable and efficient. Urban Sprawl - spreading of a city and its suburbs over rural land at the fringe of an urban area. –1– Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Transportation & Air Quality The Basics of Air Quality Particulate matter (PM) is two types of microscopic pollutants: coarse and fine particles which affect our health and the air we breathe. Fine particles, are smaller than a piece of human hair! If they get into our lungs, these particles can cause a lot of damage. PM10 - Coarse particles (microscopic dust) are up to 10 microns in diameter and typically come from rock, clay and soil. They can get past the filtering action of you nose and nasal passage and into your lungs. PM2.5 - Fine particulates are up to 2.5 microns diameter and typically come from burning and chemical reactions. They are small enough to get deep into your lungs. www.envbop.govt.nz The average person takes about 20,000 breaths a day. That’s an amazing 10,000 litres of air passing through your lungs - every day! GROUND LEVEL OZONE Ozone in the atmosphere is good, but ground level ozone is bad. Ground level ozone is a colourless, odourless gas that forms when vehicle emissions mix with sunlight. It creates smog and is a respiratory irritant. Backyard Burning Wood Burning for Home Heating Landscaping and land clearing practices can cause a lot of material to build up such as tree prunings, leaves, and grass clippings. It may seem like the easy thing to do is just burn it. But, how easy is that on your health? Ironically, backyard burning often occurs during calm weather, when the smoke can't be dispersed — and on the weekend, when many people are out for a "breath of fresh air." Going inside and closing the doors and windows won't protect you, since smoke easily seeps through small cracks and holes. Don’t clear your yard at the expense of clear air. Remember these tips: Smoke is generated by incomplete combustion (the burning of a fuel and oxidant to produce heat), which can be caused by lack of oxygen, low burning temperature, wet or green wood and other factors. Generally, any wood stove design feature that has been proven to promote more complete combustion is desirable. These features include insulated baffles, heated primary and secondary air, firebox insulation and advanced designs that promote secondary combustion. • Start a backyard compost. Both the air and your garden will benefit! If your town has a community compost, take your organic leftovers there. • Take it to the curb. Many municipalities have yard waste pick-up programs • Never burn your garbage or prohibited materials, such as tires, plastics, treated wood, paper and cardboard. Reduce waste at its source by avoiding overpackaging. • Recycle everything you can! Use your community recycling depots. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND Burn only 100% untreated wood or manufactured fireplace logs. Avoid burning other materials such as colored paper, plastics, rubber, trash and treated wood products that give off harmful chemicals, more pollution, and less heat. –2– Residential wood heating accounts for 15% of PM2.5 releases in B.C. Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Transportation & Air Quality Health 1 in 10 people suffer when air quality deteriorates. Fine particles and ground level ozone affect health by: • irritating airways (nose, throat, lungs) • aggravating asthma • reducing lung function, even in healthy children • effecting the health of plants and animals which can damage leaves, reduce growth, increase disease and invasion by insects Scientific research shows that increased levels of small particulate are responsible for more doctor and emergency room visits, lost days at school and work for adults. The very young and the elderly may also experience symptoms, even though they may not have a diagnosed heart or lung condition. Health Impacts of Vehicles • Nitrogen oxides: can irritate airways, especially your lungs. • Carbon monoxide: decreases the ability of your blood to carry oxygen. • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs): some of these, such as benzene and 1,3-butadiene, are cancercausing agents. Asthma is now the number-one reason for hospital admissions among Canadian children. The exhaust emissions of vehicles contain some chemical culprits that cause these negative health consequences. • Fine particulate matter: are known to aggravate symptoms in individuals who already suffer from respiratory or cardiovascular diseases. So, what is coming out of the tailpipe? • Ground-level ozone: irritates airways and can trigger reactions in people who have asthma. According to Environment Canada, transportation is the single largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in Canada, accounting for more than one quarter of the total. And that is not all… Transportation Alternatives Making different transportation choices can reduce pollution, accidents, and traffic congestion. You can also improve your health, save money, and have more fun! With a little organization and forethought, we can break the car addiction. Ride your bike Take the bus Carpool Cycling isn’t just for fun – it’s a way to and from places. In fact, it’s the fastest growing mode of transportation. There are more cyclists now than ever! One city bus can take 40 vehicles off the road, save money, and keep pollutants from our air! Ask around for others heading in your direction, and get onboard. Organize a carpool to go to swimming lessons, to a party, or to school. There are new bike lanes and off-road bike paths all over BC. Contact your local bike shops and ask about the best cycling routes, safe practices, and tips for bike maintenance. Skateboard, Scooter, In-line skates… Walk Use your feet! Humans have walked all over the world, traveling from one continent to another. Plan ahead and enjoy the slower pace. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND One bus can hold all these people, taking their cars off the road. –3– Use whatever wheels you’ve got! Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Transportation & Air Quality Want some new skills, and make a difference (your own form of Transportation Demand Management)? Cycling skill courses offer people the chance to get confident and take the challenge of being a cycling commuter. Courses offered by the I-go program of Central Okanagan can provide you with the know how to take to the road. You will learn: • bicycle handling techniques • traffic skills • how to prevent collisions • rules of the road • how to choose equipment and clothing • route planning Vehicle Alternatives Scientific studies in Europe have shown that children living in areas with higher traffic density have more respiratory symptoms than other children. (Health Canada) Greener Vehicles Sometimes you’ve got no choice but to use an automobile, and now there are more choices than ever for more sustainable vehicles. Talk with your parents and teachers about these. Hybrids Biodiesel A hybrid vehicle uses two or more distinct power sources for energy. Most hybrid cars use electric power from batteries and conventional gas from a gas station. Using battery power means hybrid cars burn less fuel. Biodiesel is a vegetable or animal fat-based diesel fuel that can be combined with petroleum diesel (from fuel stations) to be used in regular diesel engines. It is produced from renewable sources such recycled cooking oils and grease, that would be otherwise would be thrown away. In 1997, a college graduate named Josh Tickell drove across the United States in a Winnebago fuelled with used French fry grease from fast food restaurants. Since then, the “Veggie Van” has traveled more than 40,000km. Its exhaust smells like French Fries. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND Transportation accounts for 25% of Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions – and 40% of BC’s emissions (largest % of any Canadian province). As individual Canadians, transportation emissions represent more than 50% of our personal greenhouse gas emissions. Plug- in Electrics …Coming Soon!!! –4– Plug-in hybrid vehicles combine electric motors with gas-powered engines, just like traditional hybrids, but they can also be charged by plugging them in when they aren’t in use. Several major auto manufacturers will be offering plug-in hybrids in the near future. Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Transportation & Air Quality Go Idle Free, BC! A vehicle produces loads of pollution, even when it is not moving (when we’re idling). It’s a waste of gas AND it’s needlessly polluting the air. Why do people idle? Usually people leave their car running when they don’t think they’ll be there very long, like when someone comes to school to pick you up. But even 60 seconds of idling is bad for the environment and for us. Some people think that it saves gas to keep the car running, but in fact that’s a myth. It’s more gas-effective to turn off your vehicle and then restart it when it’s time to drive off. Children are especially impacted by idling because they breathe faster than adults and they breathe 50% more air per pound of body weight! Therefore many schools are going IDLE FREE, which means that school bus drivers and parents have to turn off their engines when they’re picking up students. It makes a difference! Schools In Action E. J. Dunn Middle School developed a “Rust to Ride Program”. They put the word out tothe community through the local media for bikes that people have rusting at home in the basement, garage, or outside. If the public decide to donate their unused bikes to the program, a student from the school fixs up one of the donated bikes. The student then gets to keep the bike that he/she fixed up with the promise to use it not only for fun but also to use it for transportation to and from school. Smart Growth Transportation systems used to be designed around roads to move vehicles around a city. This makes it more difficult to take the bus or to bike or walk. It’s important that a community develops in transportation. Smart growth is about creating which people live, work, and play, without having to drive everywhere. Five key principles to smart growth: • More people in a space – more people living in smaller areas so they can share resources and easily get to shops and schools. • Various land uses in a space – neighbourhoods with different types of land uses there - homes, businesses, stores, schools, daycares, gyms, and more. • Green space – more parks and farmland in a space. • Public transit –convenient, affordable public transit like buses and trains. • Pedestrian and cyclist friendly –more sidewalks, paths, and bike lanes. Between 1998 and 2005. In 2005. the proportion of Canadians who made at least one trip under their own power by bicycle or on foot has declined. 19% of people 18 and over walked or pedalled from one place to another, down from 26% and 25% in 1992 and 1998 respectively. What can young Canadians ,most of whom live in large metropolitan regions, do to reduce their need to use cars rather then use alternative forms of transporation? ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –5– Elementary School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Transportation & Air Quality Resources Explore transportation alternatives to school at HASTE (Hub for Action on School Transportation Emissions). Try the MyTravel calculator to calculate your travel impacts. www.hastebc.org. If you live 2 kilometers from school and you are driven in a minivan every day, the minivan emits about 1 tonne of GHG emissions. If you were to walk or ride 3 days a week, you would reduce GHG emissions by more than a half a tonne! Sustainable Action What can we do about Transportation and Air Quality? There are a number of things we can do to lesson vehicle emissions and make our air cleaner: • Suggest you not always use the car, and when you use it, plan the trip wisely – combine tasks to make just one trip instead of several. Pick up the dog from the vet, get your groceries, and go to the pool all in the same neighbourhood, and walk from place to place. • Strap on your running shoes and a backpack and walk all, or part of the way to the grocery store, to school or wherever you’re going. • If you have to go far, walk or bike to the closest bus stop, and then take the bus to your destination. • Instead of driving, make it an adventure on your bikes! Plan your day around it, learn basic repair skills, and make it a routine! • Be part of the change! Find out where the bicycle lanes are in your neighbourhood, and learn basic bike safety and maintenance. • Talk to your school principal about safe bike lock-up space at school. Bike to school with a friend or neighbour. Ask around to find the safest route to school. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –6– If you km to you w Elementary School Study Guide calori year, t Middle School Study Guide Waste W henever something is made, moved around or put into a landfill, energy and other resources are used, greenhouse gases (GHGs) are produced and harmful pollutants are introduced to our environment. The negative impacts of waste can be reduced by re-thinking our purchases, buying only what we need, choosing alternatives to toxic products, repairing, reusing, and recycling what we can, and composting. How much waste? In 2006, Canadians generated approximately 35 million tonnes of waste. Where does the waste go? 8 million tonnes (23%) was recycled and 27 million tonnes (77%) was hauled to landfills or burned in incinerators. **Statistics Canada 2006 Composition of Solid Waste Generated by Households in Canada (by weight) Other (animal waste, textiles, tires and wood) 18% Organic Metal 4% Material 40% Glass 3% Plastic 9% Paper 20% ** Statistics Canada 2005 Garbage from homes and businesses that cannot be recycled or composted ends up in landfills or is incinerated. Landfills can release methane and toxic liquids while incinerators can produce air pollution! Studies show that 25 per cent of municipal waste can be diverted away from landfills through changes in consumer behaviour. Vocabulary Biodegrade - to break down into very small particles after being exposed to soil, water, or air. Compost - a mixture of decaying organic matter, like leaves, fruit and vegetable scraps, used to improve soil and provide nutrients for plants. Leachate - the liquid created from garbage breaking down in landfills. Landfill - a site for the safe and sanitary burial of waste materials.. Mesophiles - a bacteria that is active in composts. It thrives at moderate temperature, typically between 15 and 40 °C. Methane - a potent greenhouse gas generated from the decomposition of organic materials. Microorganisms - small organisms like bacteria and fungi that help breakdown organic waste so growing plants can use the nutrients. Organic waste - biodegradable waste from plants or animals Psychrophiles - a bacteria that is active in composts. It thrives at low temperature, typically below 13°C. Recycle - to process used materials into new products again and again. Reduce - buying or using less, in order to make something last longer. Reuse - to use more than once, sometimes with a different use. Re-think - o reconsider; to think about your choices and behaviours differently than you have in the past. Thermophiles - a bacteria that is active in composts that thrives at relatively high temperatures, between 45 and 80 °C. ** source Waste Not 2004 Canada has over 10,000 landfill sites. $1 out of every $10 spent on food goes into packaging. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND The Cache Creek Landfill is a major landfill site for garbage shipped by truck from BC’s Lower Mainland. It collects 500,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste annually. –1– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Waste The 4Rs The 3Rs - Reduce, Reuse and Recycle have another ‘R’ to help reduce waste; Rethink. This step helps make the 3Rs work even better. For example, as consumers, we can ‘Rethink’ our ideas about what we purchase and how garbage could be a resource, instead of waste. Rethink items before we buy them. Consider: • What happens to this item when it is disposed? • Can it be Reused or Recycled? • What will make this product no longer useful? • Do I really need this item or just want it? • How is it made? • What raw materials were used to make it? • How can I set a good example for my community? Recycle what can’t be reduced or reused. 40 soft drink bottles are needed to make the recycled fibrefill of one sleeping bag. The total amount of energy required to produce and deliver one single-use plastic bottle of water is equivalent to filling that bottle 1/4 full with oil. Reuse when we can. The best way to decrease garbage going to landfills is to Reduce what we use. That means buying only what we need and choosing products with little or no packaging. The next best way to minimize our garbage is to Reuse as much as possible. Rent, repair, share and find a new purpose for things rather than purchasing new. • Select products that are built to last. • Use paper on both sides. • • Pack your lunch in reusable containers. Donate to second-hand shops or trade items at consignment stores. • Rent items that are not used often. • When shopping, consider buying used. • Avoid food packaged in individual servings, and when possible, buy in bulk. • • Use cloth bags for purchases. Organize a ‘litterless’ lunch day with a focus on reusable containers to raise awareness about garbage and ways to reduce. • Share your newspapers, magazines, and books. • Reuse jars and containers for storage. • Recycle what we don’t Reduce and can’t Reuse. Recycling is the last of the four Rs. Even though people often practice recycling more than the other Rs, it is more effective to reduce and reuse waste first. Our waste is a valuable resource; once we rethink, reduce and reuse it makes sense to recycle as it keeps resources out of the landfill. Recycling materials rather than using new materials makes this a closed loop system where little or no waste exists (zero waste). To ensure recycling is most effective: • • • • Buy things with recycled content. Look for the recycling loop or statements like ‘Contains Recycled Content’. Use the recycling services available in your community whether it is a curbside program or a depot system. Be selective with purchases to ensure all items are recyclable in your area. Canadians use over 55 million plastic bags every week, or between 1.5-2 bags a person. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –2– Websites for Waste There are many websites that help people reuse or recycle items they no longer want. Check out the Recycling Council of BC’s website www.rcbc.bc.ca. and click on material exchange for options in your local area: Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Waste What is Zero Waste? What happens when we recycle? Materials are sorted and shipped to companies that use this waste as a resource. Most of the waste paper, cardboard, metal, and plastic is shipped to factories where it is made into new newspaper, tissues, metal items and cardboard boxes. What do our recyclables become? Zero Waste is a way of looking at the problems of waste and using solutions that create a future without landfills or incinerators. Zero Waste means anything that is no longer wanted becomes a resource or raw material for something else. To achieve zero waste, we need to rethink the way materials, energy, and people work in order to reduce the volume and make up of waste to conserve and recover all that we can. Zero Waste means that products are made to be reused, repaired, or recycled back into nature or the marketplace. Newsprint becomes: Glass becomes: • • recycled newsprint insulation • • new glass containers fibreglass • • fruit packing trays new paper • reflective paint Zero Waste Products are designed to: • golf course sand • • • • • • • Plastic becomes: • • • • polar fleece carpets sleeping bag fill plastic lumber Aluminum becomes: • • • beverage containers automobile parts construction industry materials Cardboard becomes: • more cardboard • new paper • tissue and toilet paper Mixed paper becomes: • car interiors • asphalt shingles • new paper use recycled materials use less raw materials use less toxic materials last longer be repaired easily be taken apart easily reuse as many parts as possible and recycle the rest Why is recycle the last R? Recycling is achieved at a cost. Making something new from something else uses resources like water and energy. Collecting, sorting, and transporting recyclables requires people, equipment and buildings in communities. All of these requirements involves some degree of pollution. Electronic Waste Electronic waste (E-waste) is defined as computers, entertainment device electronics, mobile phones, and other items such as television sets and refrigerators that become obsolete and are discarded or recycled. E-waste includes persistent toxins that accumulate in the environment, including arsenic, antimony, beryllium, cadmium, copper, lead, nickel and zinc. These toxins are associated with cancer and neurological disorders, especially in children. E-waste poses a serious risk to human health and the environment when landfilled, as exposure to high levels of these chemicals is linked to adverse effects on human health and wildlife. In 2005, at least 200 million cell phones were in use across Canada and another 500 million older phones were stockpiled in drawers, closets and elsewhere, prior to being placed in the garbage. **source: Pitch In Canada Approximately 1.5 million barrels of oil—enough to run 100,000 cars for a whole year—are used to make plastic water bottles, while transporting these bottles burns even more oil. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –3– 5 billion drink boxes are thrown away each year in North America. Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Waste Plastic Waste Plastics are made from crude oil; an example of an non-renewable resource.. There are seven types of plastic. Each is a different type of resin with a different chemical composition. The codes surrounded by a Mobius Loop (chasing arrows) on the bottom of plastic products, distinguishes each type of plastic. Plastic can be used to make new items, but plastic food containers are made from new plastic to ensure that food is not contaminated by a non-food substance. Plastic can be used to make new items but plastic food containers are always made from new plastic to ensure that uses do not contaminate a container for food. How are plastics recycled? Plastics are collected at the curb or at a depot and sorted according to resin type. Plastic items are then baled and shipped to a facility for shredding, screening, cleaning, filtering, melting, extruding, and pelletization in order to sell for new processing. • • • • • • • Plastic was first unveiled by Alexander Parkes at the 1862 Great International Exhibition in London. Plastic takes 1 million years to break down. The production and transportation of bottled water contributes to greenhouse gas emissions. It takes more water to produce a plastic bottle than the bottle holds. Even if a plastic bottle is recycled, energy is needed to reuse the plastic. Recycled plastic can be made into fibre to make new bottles, buckets, pails, carpeting, and fleece jackets. 20% - 40% recycled content is common in plastic bottles for shampoo, skin care or laundry soap. Plastic Soup In landfills, plastic can take over 1000 years to degrade (no sunlight, water or air). When plastic is not recycled or contained in a landfill, even greater problems can occur. Plastic waste can have dramatic, negative impacts on all ecosystems. One growing negative impact is that plastics and other waste materials from land have been gathering in the world’s oceans in several ‘gyres’ (large surface circling, ocean currents). According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the actual sizes of the waste patches are difficult to measure as they are not all a solid mass of waste. One of the larger waste patches, the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, spreads roughly 7-9 million square miles stretching off the coast of California towards Japan. These giant, floating collections of trash have continued to expand affecting all marine life. Tiny bits of plastic are often mistaken as a food source (Zooplankton) and are consumed by other marine animals, while larger pieces can entangle animals making movement difficult to impossible. The challenge with plastic waste is that it does not biodegrade to a natural source, rather it photodegrades (breaks down in sunlight) into smaller and smaller pieces, but still remains plastic. ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –4– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Waste Composting What is composting? Composting uses processes of decomposition and renewal to recycle food and yard waste into a product that is beneficial to plants. Bacteria, fungi, worms, and other organisms in the soil and air break down organic waste. Decomposition is nature’s way of recycling. On average, the composting process can take 3 to 12 months, depending on temperature, moisture, size of material, oxygen, carbon-to-nitrogen ration and the degree of turning or mixing. The more actively these are managed, the faster the process. Compost can be harvested and applied to yard and gardens throughout the year. However, early spring is the best time to use it because the nutrients are available to the plants over a longer period of time. There are many benefits to composting. Some of the benefits include: • • • • • • • • • • creates air and water space in dense soils (clay) for good root penetration holds moisture in the soil releases nutrients slowly provides important macronutrients (nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium) provides micronutrients (calcium, magnesium and boron) balances the ph enabling a greater variety of plants to grow the soil and makes soil nutrients available over a wider range of acidities,enabling a greater variety of plants to grow controls some soil-borne diseases prevents soil erosion reduces overall waste sent to landfill, and reduces the amount of methane gas produced in landfills. What can be composted? Green Material (Nitrogen-rich) • vegetables and fruits • tea leaves/bags • coffee grounds • fresh grass clippings • green plant trimmings Brown Material (Carbon-rich) • • • • straw sawdust, wood shavings dry leaves shredded newspaper What cannot be composted? • • • • • anything that attracts pests (e.g. meat, bones, greasy foods and oils) dairy products, processed foods, and greasy foods and oils grass clippings treated with pesticides dog or cat feces BBQ ashes or coal Secrets for composting success • • • • • Chop up large material thumb size is best. Add equal amounts of carbonrich and nitrogen-rich materials. Add grass clippings in thin layers (5 cm thick). Keep composting material moist but not soggy. It should feel like a wrung-out sponge. Add air (aerate) once a week by turning or poking holes in decomposing material. 3 major types of bacteria work in a compost bin, each active at a different temperature range; psychrophiles at 0-13°C, mesophiles at 15-40°C and thermophiles at 45-70°C. One application of compost could have a positive effect on plant growth for up to 8 years. **source Recycling Council of BC ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –5– Middle School Study Guide Middle School Study Guide Waste Waste and Climate Change Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are the main contributors to climate change. Carbon dioxide and methane are two major GHGs. In terms of waste, carbon dioxide enters the atmosphere from the energy used to harvest materials, make and transport products and waste to their destinations. The more we consume, the more waste we produce, the more trucks are required to move the waste whether it is for recycling, incineration, or landfill and therefore more GHGs are produced. Practicing the 4Rs reduces GHG emissions because: • • • fewer raw materials are extracted less energy is required less waste is generated Methane enters the atmosphere from landfills. In landfill sites, methane is produced whenever organic wastes like food, wood or paper decompose anaerobically, i.e. without the presence of air. Landfill sites account for about 38% of Canada’s total methane emissions. The problem with landfill gas is that methane is among the more powerful greenhouse gases. It’s 20 times more powerful than carbon dioxide as a GHG and has a big impact on climate change. A modern, well-managed landfill site is much less damaging than an older one with poor or no methane recovery systems. Even with a methane recovery system, not all landfill gas will be captured. A landfill site operating to the best standards has about 15% of its methane escape. Reducing methane gas from landfill sites is one way climate change can be addressed. Landfill gas production can be reduced by: • keeping food out of landfills (i.e. purchase only what you need to reduce waste and compost as much as possible) • reusing, recycling, or composting paper and wood • composting yard waste at home or at specific facilities Students in Action Giant’s Head Elementary School District 67 - Okanagan-Skaha The goal of this Destination Conservation (DC) campaign was to reduce the amount of garbage at school during Litterless Lunch Thursdays by increasing participation and recycling more containers. This team assessed the problem and then set a target for waste reduction. Their strategy encouraged everyone to participate by providing specific suggestions about how to reduce waste. The team achieved success by delivering classroom presentations and announcements and using posters as reminders. They achieved this in several ways. They visited each class to make a presentation, delivered announcements and used posters to remind everyone. In addition, the DC team went to each classroom to collect recyclables before sorting and returning these to a depot. What they learned was that it was more effective to deliver an awareness campaign instead of having a competition so families could decide for themselves how they wanted to participate. This made the campaign easy for more people to participate. for more people. The team reduced waste and raised over $800 for their playground fund from recycling containers. For more information on Destination Conservation programs, visit www.dcplanet.ca. More than 140,000 tonnes of computer equipment, phones, televisions, stereos and small home appliances accumulate in Canadian landfills each year. That’s equivalent to the weight of about 28,000 adult African elephants. **source: Environment Canada via the Recycling Council of BC ENVIRONMENTAL MIND GRIND –6– Middle School Study Guide