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DMC-104: Geography and Environment Course Teacher: Dr. Syed Hafizur Rahman (SHR) M. Sc. (JU), Ph. D. (Birmingham University, United Kingdom) Permanent Position Professor Department of Environmental Sciences Jahangirnagar University, Dhaka-1342 E-mail: Day & Time: [email protected] 03:00 to 04:00PM (Wed & Thu) 14 March 2013 Last Lecture Physical Geography: Earth’s Surface: Internal Geological Processes, External Processes, Fluvial and Karst Processes, Glaciations, Desert Landforms, Ocean Margins, Earth’s Climates: The Atmosphere, Global Climates, Cloud Formation, Storms. This Lecture Biogeography and Natural Resources: Earth’s Biological Systems (Biomes, Forests, Grasslands, Deserts, Tundra and High Altitude Biomes, National Park Systems), Natural Resources (Soils, Water, Renewable Resources, Nonrenewable Resources) Human Geography: Human Society and the Earth (The Human Environment, Population Growth and Distribution, Global Urbanization, Global Time and Time Zones), Climate and Human Societies (Climate and Human Settlement, Flood Control, Atmospheric Pollution, Disease and Climate), Exploration and Transportation (Exploration and Historical Trade Routes, Road Transportation, Railroads, Air Transportation). Biogeography and Natural Resources Earth’s Biological Systems: Biomes • The major recognizable life zones of the continents, biomes are characterized by their plant communities. • Temperature, precipitation, soil, and length of day affect the survival and distribution of biome species. • Species diversity within a biome may increase its stability and capability to deliver natural services, including enhancing the quality of the atmosphere, forming and protecting the soil, controlling pests, and providing clean water, fuel, food, and drugs. • Land biomes are the temperate, tropical, and boreal forests; tundra; desert; grasslands; and chaparral. Temperate Forest • The temperate forest biome occupies the so-called temperate zones in the mid-latitudes (from about 30 to 60 degrees north and south of the equator). • Temperate forests are found mainly in Europe, eastern North America, and eastern China, and in narrow zones on the coasts of Australia, New Zealand, Tasmania, and the Pacific coasts of North and South America. • Their climates are characterized by high rainfall and temperatures that vary from cold to mild. • Temperate forests contain primarily deciduous trees—including maple, oak, hickory, and beechwood—and, secondarily, evergreen trees— including pine, spruce, fir, and hemlock. Tropical Forest • Tropical forests are in frost-free areas between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. • Temperatures range from warm to hot year-round, because the Sun’s rays shine nearly straight down around midday. • These forests are found in northern Australia, the East Indies, southeastern Asia, equatorial Africa, and parts of Central America and northern South America. • Tropical forests have high biological diversity and contain about 15 percent of the world’s plant species. • Animal life lives at different layers of tropical forests. Boreal Forest • The boreal forest is a circumpolar Northern Hemisphere biome spread across Russia, Scandinavia, Canada, and Alaska. • The region is very cold. • Evergreen trees such as white spruce and black spruce dominate this zone, which also contains larch, balsam, pine, and fir, and some deciduous hardwoods such as birch and aspen. Tundra • About 5 percent of the earth’s surface is covered with Arctic tundra, and 3 percent with alpine tundra. • The Arctic tundra is the area of Europe, Asia, and North America north of the boreal coniferous forest zone, where the soils remain frozen most of the year. • Arctic tundra has a permanent frozen subsoil, called permafrost. • Deep snow and low temperatures slow the soil-forming process. Desert • The desert biome covers about one-seventh of the earth’s surface. • Deserts typically receive no more than 10 inches (25 centimeters) of rainfall a year, but evaporation generally exceeds rainfall. • Deserts are found around the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. • As the warm air rises over the equator, it cools and loses its water content. • This dry air descends in the two subtropical zones on each side of the equator; as it warms, it picks up moisture, resulting in drying the land. Rainfall is a key agent in shaping the desert. Grassland • Grasslands cover about a quarter of the earth’s surface, and can be found between forests and deserts. • Treeless grasslands grow in parts of central North America, Central America, and eastern South America that have between 10 and 40 inches (250-1,000 millimeters) of erratic rainfall. • The climate has a high rate of evaporation and periodic major droughts. • The biome is also subject to fire. Mediterranean • The Mediterranean biome is found in the Mediterranean Basin, California, southern Australia, middle Chile, and Cape Province of South Africa. • In California it is known as chaparral. This region has a climate of wet winters and summer drought. • The plants have tough leathery leaves and may contain thorns. • Regional fires clear the area of dense and dead vegetation. Fire, heat, and drought shape the region. • The vegetation dwarfing is due to the severe drought and extreme climate changes. Ocean • The ocean biome covers more than 70 percent of the earth’s surface and includes 90 percent of its volume. • The ocean has four zones. The intertidal zone is shallow and lies at the land’s edge. • The continental shelf, which begins where the intertidal zone ends, is a plain that slopes gently seaward. • The neritic zone (continental slope) begins at a depth of about 600 feet (180 meters), where the gradual slant of the continental shelf becomes a sharp tilt toward the ocean floor, plunging about 12,000 feet (3,660 meters) to the ocean bottom, which is known as the abyss. • The abyssal zone is so deep that it does not have light. Human Impact on Biomes • Human interaction with biomes has increased biotic invasions, reduced the numbers of species, changed the quality of land and water resources, and caused the proliferation of toxic compounds. • Managed care of biomes may not be capable of undoing these problems. Natural Resources Natural Resources: Introduction • Our environment provides us with a variety of goods and services necessary for our day to day lives. • These natural resources include, air, water, soil, minerals, along with the climate and solar energy, which form the non-living or ‘abiotic’ part of nature. • The ‘biotic’ or living parts of nature consists of plants and animals, including microbes. Plants and animals can only survive as communities of different organisms, all closely linked to each in their own habitat, and requiring specific abiotic conditions. • Interactions between the abiotic aspects of nature and specific living organisms together form ecosystems of various types. Earth’s Resources and Man • The resources on which mankind is dependent are provided by various sources or ‘spheres’: Atmosphere, Hydrosphere, Lithosphere, Biosphere. 1) Atmosphere – Oxygen for human respiration (metabolic requirements). – Oxygen for wild fauna in natural ecosystems and domestic animals used by man as food. – Oxygen as a part of carbon dioxide, used for the growth of plants (in turn are used by man). Earth’s Resources and Man 2) Hydrosphere • Clean water for drinking (a metabolic requirement for living processes). • Water for washing and cooking. • Water used in agriculture and industry. • Food resources from the sea, including fish, crustacea, sea weed, etc. • Food from fresh water sources, including fish, crustacea and aquatic plants. • Water flowing down from mountain ranges harnessed to generate electricity in hydroelectric projects. Earth’s Resources and Man 3) Lithosphere • Soil, the basis for agriculture to provide us with food. • Stone, sand and gravel, used for construction. • Micronutrients in soil, essential for plant growth. • Microscopic flora, small soil fauna and fungi in soil, important living organisms of the lithosphere, which break down plant litter as well as animal wastes to provide nutrients for plants. • A large number of minerals on which our industries are based. • Oil, coal and gas, extracted from underground sources. It provides power for vehicles, agricultural machinery, industry, and for our homes. Earth’s Resources and Man 4) Biosphere • Food, from crops and domestic animals, providing human metabolic requirements. • Food, for all forms of life which live as interdependent species in a community and form food chains in nature on which man is dependent. • Energy needs: Biomass fuel wood collected from forests and plantations, along with other forms of organic matter, used as a source of energy. • Timber and other construction materials. Natural Resources: Renewable/Nonrenewable • Ecosystems act as resource producers and processors. • Solar energy is the main driving force of ecological systems, providing energy for the growth of plants in forests, grasslands and aquatic ecosystems. • A forest recycles its plant material slowly by continuously returning its dead material, leaves, branches, etc. to the soil. • Grasslands recycle material much faster than forests as the grass dries up after the rains are over every year. • All the aquatic ecosystems are also solar energy dependent and have cycles of growth when plant life spreads and aquatic animals breed. • The sun also drives the water cycle. Non-renewable resources • These are minerals that have been formed in the lithosphere over millions of years and constitute a closed system. • These non-renewable resources, once used, remain on earth in a different form and, unless recycled, become waste material. • Non-renewable resources include fossil fuels such as oil and coal, which if extracted at the present rate, will soon be totally used up. • The end products of fossil fuels are in the form of heat and mechanical energy and chemical compounds, which cannot be reconstituted as a resource. Renewable resources • Though water and biological living resources are considered renewable. They are in fact renewable only within certain limits. They are linked to natural cycles such as the water cycle. • Fresh water (even after being used) is evaporated by the sun’s energy, forms water vapour and is reformed in clouds and falls to earth as rain. However, water sources can be overused or wasted to such an extent that they locally run dry. Water sources can be so heavily polluted by sewage and toxic substances that it becomes impossible to use the water. • Forests, once destroyed take thousands of years to regrow into fully developed natural ecosystems with their full complement of species. Forests thus can be said to behave like non-renewable resources if overused. • Fish are today being over-harvested until the catch has become a fraction of the original resource and the fish are incapable of breeding successfully to replenish the population. • The output of agricultural land if mismanaged drops drastically. • When the population of a species of plant or animal is reduced by human activities, until it cannot reproduce fast enough to maintain a viable number, the species becomes extinct. • Many species are probably becoming extinct without us even knowing, and other linked species are affected by their loss. ROLE OF AN INDIVIDUAL IN CONSERVATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES • Until fairly recently mankind acted as if he could go on for ever exploiting the ecosystems and natural resources such as soil, water, forests and grasslands on the Earth’s surface and extracting minerals and fossil fuels from underground. • But, in the last few decades, it has become increasingly evident that the global ecosystem has the capacity to sustain only a limited level of utilization. • Biological systems cannot go on replenishing resources if they are overused or misused. At a critical point, increasing pressure destabilizes their natural balance. ROLE OF AN INDIVIDUAL IN CONSERVATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES • Even biological resources traditionally classified as ‘renewable’ - such as those from our oceans, forests, grasslands and wetlands, are being degraded by overuse and may be permanently destroyed. • And no natural resource is limitless. ‘Non-renewable’ resources will be rapidly exhausted if we continue to use them as intensively as at present. • The two most damaging factors leading to the current rapid depletion of all forms of natural resources are increasing ‘consumerism’ on the part of the affluent sections of society, and rapid population growth. Next class Human Geography