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Humans in the Biosphere Honors Biology Chapter 6 The Tragedy of the Commons • Areas used by everyone are no one’s responsibility • Leads to misuse; loss of resources Renewable Resources • Resources can regenerate (living) or • Resources that can be recycled through biogeochemical cycles • Examples – Trees – Water Renewable resources are NOT necessarily UNLIMITED. • Freshwater is a renewable resource, BUT there are events that CAN make it very limited. For example: – Drought – Pollution Nonrenewable Resources • Cannot be replenished by natural processes. • Examples: – Fossil fuels Is a tree population renewable or nonrenewable? • Individual trees are renewable • A population of trees may not be, because the ecosystem they were in may change forever once the trees are gone. Sustainable Development • Using resources without depleting them • Providing for human needs without causing long-term damage to the environment • Must take into account – Functioning of ecosystems – Human economic systems Sustainable Development Strategy - Example • Using insects instead pesticides to control pests Land Resources - Soil • Renewable or not? – Renewable if managed properly Mismanagement of Soil Resources • Soil Erosion – Wearing away of surface soil by water and wind – Results when land is plowed, and roots that hold soil in place are removed Mismanagement of Soil Resources • Desertification – Misuse of soil causes once productive areas to become deserts • • • • Dry climate Farming Overgrazing Drought Forest Resources • Ways in which forest resources are used by people – Building – Burning Forest Resources • Ways in which forests provide ecological services – Forests as “lungs of the Earth” • Absorb CO2 and release O2 – – – – – Store nutrients Provide habitat and food for organisms Moderate climate Limit soil erosion Protect freshwater supplies Are Forests Renewable Resources? • Maybe – it depends on the forest – Our temperate deciduous forests seem to come back pretty well after cutting, though not always exactly as they were – Old Growth Forests are NOT renewable • Ancient trees and ecosystems • Will not be replaced by a similar ecosystem if cut – The plants and animals dependent on the anceint trees in the system would die – Even if allowed to come back, the ecosystem would never return to its present state. Old Growth Forest Deforestation • Definition: The loss of forests • Deforestation can lead to – Severe soil erosion – Erosion can wash nutrients out of the soil – Grazing or plowing after deforestation can cause permanent changes in the soils that prevent regrowth of trees. Fishery Resources • Overfishing – Harvesting fish at a rate greater than they can replace themselves by reproduction – 1950 – 1990 • Fish harvest dramatically increased • Fish populations dramatically declined • “Tragedy of the Commons” – Fishing of certain species banned • Some populations have seen recovery Virginia Example • Menhaden – “breadbasket of the Bay” – favorite foods of striped bass, bluefish, sea trout, tuna and sharks • Menhaden Fishery – one of the most important and productive on the Atlantic coast – providing fish meal, fish oil and fish solubles and bait for other fisheries – More pounds of menhaden are landed each year than any other fish in the United States – Fishery is considered stable along Atlantic coast, BUT may be causing damage in the Bay • Menhaden play a key ecological role in the Bay as an important prey species for top predators such as striped bass, and for their ability to filter the water • the number of juvenile menhaden in the Bay population has been low • A proposal to cap the harvest in Chesapeake Bay is under discussion Menhaden Fishery in Virginia Aquaculture • Raising aquatic animals for human consumptions – Good: provides food for people without drawing from natural populations – Disposal of wastes from the aquatic animals can be a source of pollution Air Resources • Smog – Mixture of chemicals that results in a brown/gray haze in the atmosphere. • Mostly due to – Automobile exhaust – Industrial emissions Pollutant • A harmful material that can enter the biosphere through the land, air or water. • Pollutants released from burning fossil fuels include: – Carbon dioxide – Nitrates and Sulfates – Particulates What are particulates • Microscopic particles of ash and dust that can enter the nose mouth and lungs causing health problems Nitrates and Sulfates • Combine with water vapor in the air • Create Acid Rain – Kills plants by damaging leaves – Change soil chemistry – Change chemistry of standing water ecosystems – Dissolves and releases toxic elements that may be bound up in soil • mercury Freshwater Resources • People use freshwater for – Drinking – Washing – Watering crops – Industry – Recreation Pollution Threatens Freshwater Supplies • Improperly discarded chemicals can enter streams and rivers • Wastes discarded on land can seep through soil into groundwater supplies • Sewage containing phosphorus and nitrogen encourages algae growth • Sewage can also spread disease – Though most cities due try to treat sewage before it enters water ways… – Still, animal waste runs off cow pastures, etc. Protection of Wetlands and the sustainable use of water • Wetlands act to purify water that passes through them • Saving wetlands means cleaner water Primary use of water in the U.S. • Agriculture – Uses ¾ of freshwater The Value of Biodiversity Terms • Biodiversity – Sum total of the genetically based variety of all organisms in the biosphere • Ecosystem diversity – the variety of habitats, communities and ecological processes in the living world • Species diversity – number of different species in the biosphere • Genetic diversity – sum total of all the different forms of genetic information carried by organisms living on Earth Why is biodiversity of practical value to humans? • Species of many kinds have provided us with foods, industrial products and medicines • Inherent value just of its own merit??? Threats to Biodiversity – Human Impacts • • • • Altering habitats Hunting species to extinction Introducing toxins into the environment Introducing foreign species into a new environment Habitat Alteration • Natural habitats may be destroyed when land is developed • As habitats disappear, the species that live in them vanish • Habitat fragmentation – The splitting up of ecosystems as developments take up land area • Habitats become biological islands – isolated • The smaller the island, the smaller the number of species and population sizes – the more vulnerable they are. Habitat fragmentation Demand for Wildlife Products • Demand for animal species products has caused extinction by hunting – Carolina parakeet – Passenger pigeon Pollution – Biological Magnification • Certain polluntants are NONbiodegradable • When producers take chemicals these into their bodies, they are stored in tissues rather than altered and excreted. • When consumers eat the producers, they consume more concentrated amounts of the chemical • This pattern repeats itself as you move up the food chain and the toxin gets more an more concentrated. Biological Magnification • Definition: phenomenon in which the concentration of certain compounds in each organism in a food chain increases Famous Incidents of Biological Magnification • DDT DDT and Biological Magnification • Decade After WWII • Pesticide industry propmoted the benefits of DDT before the consequences of its use were understood. • By the 1950s scientists learned that: – DDT persists in the environment – DDT is transported by water to areas far from where it is applied – By this time, DDT was already a global problem DDT and Biological Magnification • Who was affected – Pelicans, ospreys, eagles – Top of the food chain – Affected calcium deposition in eggs – made them weak and easy to crush • Weight of parent while incubating eggs crushed eggs Other pollutants and biological magnification • PCBs – Great Lakes – Endocrine system problems in lots of animals including humans – Concentration in Herring Gull eggs is 5,000 times greater than in phytoplankton at base of food web Other Pollutants and Biological Magnification • Mercury – By-product of plastic production – Plastic production and coal power plants – Expelled into rivers/oceans – Bacteria at the bottom mud convert to a more harmful substance • Methyl mercury • Accumulates in tissues of organisms including humans Introduced / Invasive Species • Species that are introduced into a new environment • May be no natural predators • Reproduce rapidly • Take over habitat • Crowd out native species • Reduce biodiversity in native ecosystems Invasive species Zebra mussels • Native to freshwater lakes of southeast Russia • Spread began in 1700s • First discovered in this country in Great Lakes in 1988 • Ballast water from ships probably responsible for introduction Kudzu Kudzu • Introduced intentionally in 1876 as a forage crop and ornamental plant • From 1935 to 1950 farmers were encouraged to plant it to prevent erosion • The southern U.S. has near perfect conditions for this plant to grow out of control, which it has done. Northern snakehead Northern Snakehead • • • • Native to China, Russia, Korea Top level predator First reported in U.S. in 2000 in pond in Maryland Found in pond in Chesapeake Bay watershed – pond was drained and the fish were destroyed • A man admitted releasing two snakeheads into the pond after purchasing them in NY • 19 found in Potomac River in 2004 • Found in other states now Phragmites • Highly invasive • Threatens native marsh plants Veined Rapa Whelk • • Our Knobbed whelk at left Rapa Whelk on right w/ egg masses on far right Nutria • Native to S. America (Brazil, etc) • 1899 - Intentionally introduced to N. America for their fur • 1940 – nutria fur market collapsed – Farmers released them or did not recapture those that escaped • Aggressive nature and habitat needs put it in competition with native muskrat • Feeding style very damaging to native wetlands • Young are food for foxes, etc., but no predators for adults except humans Conserving Biodiversity • Conservation – Wise management of natural resources, including the preservation of habitats and wildlife – Conservation seeks to protect biodiversity Conservation Strategies • Preventing single species extinction • Example – Zoos – Establish captive breeding programs – Raise and protect animals until population is stable – then return to wild. Conservation Strategies • Now more focused on protecting entire ecosystems – Ensures that natural habitats and interactions of many different species are preserved at the same time – Much bigger challenge • Governments and conservation groups must work together to set aside land, etc. • Even though the U.S. has lots of national parks, etc., this is not nearly enough to protect biodiversity Hot Spots • Places where large numbers of habitats and species are in immediate danger of extinction as a result of human activity • Hot spot strategy MAY help to focus efforts Effects of Ecosystem Protection on People • Regulations to reduce hunting/fishing may place financial hardships on people for several years • But what will consequences be if nothing is done? Ozone depletion • Ozone layer – 20 – 50 km above Earth’s surface – Made of O3 – A pollutant at Earth’s surface – Protects people from UV radiation Ozone depletion • Hole in ozone was discovered in 1970s – Image is from 2006 • Over Antarctica • Continued to grow larger and last longer • 1974 – Cause of ozone hole determined – Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) • Propellants in aerosol cans • Coolant in refrigerators, air conditioners, etc. Ozone depletion • 1987, US and many other nations began reducing use of CFCs • Today they are mostly banned • Effects of ban will not be seen right away – CFCs linger for years in the atmosphere – Ozone hole should shrink and disappear in 50 years Global Climate Change • Greenhouse Effect – CO2 in atmosphere allows high energy UV radiation – Warms Earth – Earth radiates heat back towards space as low energy infrared radiation • Not strong enough to penetrate CO2 • Heat remains to keep climate on Earth moderate – Greenhouse Effect is GOOD and NEEDED • Without it Earth would be MUCH colder Problem • Too much CO2 traps too much heat • Result is global warming • Too much CO2 in atmosphere due to – Burning of fossil fuels – Reduction in forests, etc. Global Warming • Definition – increase of average temperature of the biosphere • Records show: – Since 1900 temp has risen .6 C – Since 1980 temp has risen .2 to .3 C – 1990s were warmest decade on record – 1998 was warmest year on record Is Global Warming REALLY occurring • YES Is global warming due to human activity? • Earth’s climate does fluctuate naturally – Remember, there was once an ice age – Glaciers have advanced and retreated over geologic history • Couldn’t the rise in temperatures we’re observing be part of this natural fluctuation? Evidence for global warming being caused by human activity • The current temperature increases are unlike anything ever observed in history • They directly coincide with humans increased burning of fossil fuels • The vast majority of scientists agree that the evidence shows humans are impacting global warming • Still there is controversy among some… – Careful to consider the sources… Possible Effects of Global Warming • Average global temperatures will increase by 1-2 degrees C by 2050 • Sea level rise due to melting ice caps – Coastal ecosystems – Coastal human communities • N. America – more droughts? • Entire ecosystems change as climates change