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Chapter 8 Ecosystem services Introduction 8-1 Material cycling and energy flow 8-2 Ecosystem services 8-3 The relation between ecosystem services and intensity of use 8-4 The fallacy that economic supply and demand protect natural resources from overexploitation Introduction 1. Renewable resources vs. waste (fig. 8.1) 2. Ecosystem services depends on two parts: material cycling and energy flow 3. Overexploitation: take too much from ecosystems and damage ecosystem 8-1 Material cycling and energy flow 1. Production (fig. 8.2) (1) Photosynthesis: joins carbon into the carbon chains based on sunlight (2) Biological production or primary production: the growth of the plants 2. Consumption (1) Use the carbon chains in their food (2) Respiration: carbon chains are broken apart and release energy 3. Material cycling (1) Nutrient cycling of production and consumption (2) Consumers: herbivores, predator, scavengers, parasites, pathogens (3) Decomposers: release any mineral nutrients into the environment 4. The laws of thermodynamics (1) Energy forms: radiation, chemical, mechanical, electrical, nuclear, heat (2) First law of thermodynamics: energy can never be created or destroyed, but it can be transformed from one form into another (3) Second law of thermodynamics: whenever energy is converted from one form to another, some of the energy becomes low-level heat. (fig. 8.3) (4) High-level energy transfer to low-level heat (fig. 8.4) 5. A metaphor for material cycling and energy flow in ecosystems (1) A pot of water on a stove (fig. 8.5) (2) High-level energy → cycling (water self-organization) → low-level heat 6. Energy flow in ecosystems (1) Net primary production (carbon chains): photosynthesis – respiration (2) Consumer eat high-level energy (carbon chains) and release low-level heat (3) Food chain efficiency: 10-50% (fig. 8.6) (fig. 8.7) (4) Eventually converted to low-level heat, as infrared radiation (fig. 8.8) (5) Human energy: labor, mechanized energy, chemical fertilizer, (6) Modern agriculture, most of human energy inputs come from petroleum 8-2 Ecosystem services 1. How dependent humans are on the functioning of parts of the ecosystem (fig. 8.9) 2. Two essential services: renewable resources and purification 8-3 The relation between ecosystem services and intensity of use 1. Relation between ecosystem services and intensity of use (fig. 8.10) 2. Overexploitation: deplete the ecosystems natural capital 3. Ecosystem services may disappear if the intensity of use is excessive (1) Human-induced succession, desertification, … (fig. 8.11) (2) Salinization: irrigation in arid regions and makes the soil toxic for crop (3) River purification decline (4) Evaluation and monitoring overexploitation, precautionary principle 8-4 The fallacy that economic supply and demand protect natural resources from overexploitation 1. Invisible hand of supply and demand protects renewable resources from overexploitation (fig. 8.12) 2. Fallacy: switch from one stability domain to another (fig. 6.6) 3. Irreversible: forest clear-cut → soil erosion → grass or desert 4. Irreversible: forest road → farming in hillslope