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Happy Monday… Week 2 Sustainable Ecosystems

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Presentation on theme: "Happy Monday… Week 2 Sustainable Ecosystems"— Presentation transcript:

1 Happy Monday… Week 2 Sustainable Ecosystems
First Five! Gather in small group and share the significant statements you selected from the article “New OIL”. Share concerns, ideas… suggestions for a more sustainable world! 2. Brief PPT on Chapter 1 Introduction to Environmental Science with a review of the Scientific Method! 3. Then…Introduction to Ecocolumn Challenge You will be challenged to build, monitor and maintain artificial closed system habitats. Your challenge is to plan a sustainable system! Water=Power Ted Talk

2 Introduction Environment Ecology Environmental Science
External conditions that affect living organisms Ecology Study of relationships between living organisms and their environment Environmental Science how nature works. how the environment effects us. how we effect the environment. how we can live more sustainably without degrading our life-support system.

3 Life without water! Bolivia, a world without water! Personal Stories
Read the New Oil! Should water be privatized?

4 Unit 1 Powerpoint Chapters 1 & 2 What is Capital…
Unit 1 Powerpoint Chapters 1 & 2 What is Capital…. Solar Capital, Social Capital, Earth Capital?

5 Capital I think of capital as …Value…..
Social Capital… When you think about yourself… How good is you word?

6 Solar Capital and Earth Capital
Energy from the sun Provides 99% of the energy used on earth Earth Capital Life-support and Economic Services Environment Planet’s air, water, soil, wildlife, minerals, natural purification, recycling, pest control,…

7 Carrying Capacity Lets go fishing… Your pond could only support 40 fish…Explain What would happen if you put too many fish? The maximum number of organisms of a local, regional, or global environment can support over a specified period Variables Location Time Short term ~ seasonal changes Long-term ~global changes in factors such as climate Technology K.. Carrying Capacity is NOT STATIC… Explain…..

8 Sustainability Here is the Deal…
The ability of a specified system to survive and function over time for future generations. $1,000,000 10% interest Live on up to $100,000 per year Examples: Sustainable earth, resource harvest, and society Here is the Deal… Can your way of life support your children’s, children’s children????? That is sustainability!

9 We rely on natural resources
Natural resources = substances and energy sources needed for survival Renewable natural resources = that can be replenished Perpetually renewed: sunlight, wind, wave energy Renew themselves over short periods: timber, water, soil These can be destroyed Nonrenewable natural resources = that are unavailable after depletion Oil, coal, minerals

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11 We rely on ecosystem services
Natural resources are “goods” produced by nature Earth’s natural resources provide “services” to us Ecosystem services = services that arise from the normal functioning of natural services Purify air and water, cycle nutrients, regulate climate Pollinate plants, receive and recycle wastes We degrade ecosystem services by depleting resources, destroying habitat, generating pollution Increased human affluence has intensified degradation

12 Biodiversity Genetic Diversity Species Diversity Ecological Diversity
Variety in a genetic makeup among individuals within a single species Species Diversity Variety among the species or distinct types of living organisms found in different habitats of the planet Ecological Diversity Variety of forests, deserts, grasslands, streams, lakes, oceans, wetlands, and other communities

13 Scientific Method- Manipulative Experiments vs Natural Experiments.

14 We test hypotheses in different ways
Manipulative experiments yield the strongest evidence Researchers control independent variables Reveal causal relationships Many things cannot be manipulated Natural experiments show real-world complexity Use existing conditions to test predictions—little control over variables Results are not neat and clean Answers are not black and white

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16 Develop a hypothesis and Make predictions
Hypothesis = a statement that tries to explain the question The hypothesis generates predictions = specific statements that can be directly tested The test results either support or reject the hypothesis

17 Test the predictions Variable = a condition that can change
Independent variable = a variable that can be manipulated- That is what you are testing…. Dependent variable = a variable that depends on the independent variable- THE DATA

18 Test the predictions Controlled experiment-Leave out the Independent variable. Except the independent variable whose effect is being tested Control = for comparison Quantitative data = information that uses numbers Qualitative data = information that does not use numbers

19 The scientific process continues beyond the scientific method
The scientific process guards against faulty research. Checks include: Peer review Publication in scientific journals Competition for funding So Here is the Challenge and you will be Challenged!

20 Materials & Methods Materials Methods
Models help us predict patterns in nature Bottle Biology- Use water quality test kits to monitor your ecosystems! Materials & Methods Materials Liter bottles, distilled water, sand, soil, rocks, fish, snails, aquatic plants, soil, scissors, packing tape, water quality testing equipment. Methods Design and assemble your eco-column to include terrestrial, aquatic and decompositional chambers. Discuss Energy flow, and nutrient cycles. Monitor each week for changes.

21 Environmental Degradation
Common Property Resources Tragedy of the Commons Resources owned by none, but available to all users free of charge May convert potentially renewable resources into nonrenewable resources

22 Natural capital degradation
The exponential increasing flow of material resources through the world’s economic systems depletes, degrades and pollutes the environment. Figure 1-11

23 Nonrenewable Resources
Recycling Collecting and reprocessing a resource into new products Reuse Using a resource over and over in the same form

24 ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS: CAUSES AND CONNECTIONS
The major causes of environmental problems are: Population growth Wasteful resource use Poverty Poor environmental accounting Ecological ignorance

25 Poverty and Environmental Problems
1 of 3 children under 5, suffer from severe malnutrition. Figure 1-12 and 1-13

26 Our Ecological Footprint
Humanity’s ecological footprint has exceeded earths ecological capacity. Figure 1-7

27 Pollution Any addition to air, water, soil, or food that threatens the health, survival, or activities of humans or other living organisms Solid, liquid, or gaseous by-products or wastes

28 Point Source Pollutants
From a single, identifiable sources Smokestack of a power plant Drainpipe of a meat-packing plant Exhaust pipe of an automobile

29 Nonpoint Source Pollutants
Dispersed and often difficult to identify sources Runoff of fertilizers and pesticides Storm Drains (#1 source of oil spills in oceans)

30 Negativity of Pollutant
Chemical Nature How active and harmful it is to living organisms Concentration Amount per unit volume or weight of air, water, soil or body weight Persistence Time it stays in the air, water, soil or body

31 Types of Pollutants Factors that determine the severity of a pollutant’s effects: chemical nature, concentration, and persistence. Pollutants are classified based on their persistence: Degradable pollutants Biodegradable pollutants Slowly degradable pollutants Nondegradable pollutants

32 Water Pollution Sediment Nutrient overload Toxic chemicals
Infectious agents Oxygen depletion Pesticides Oil spills Excess heat

33 Air Pollution Global climate change Stratospheric ozone depletion
Urban air pollution Acid deposition Outdoor pollutants Indoor pollutants Noise

34 Solution: Pollution cleanup
Output Pollution Cleanup Involves cleaning up pollutants after they have been produced Most expensive and time consuming

35 Solutions: Pollution Prevention
Input Pollution Control or Throughput Solution Slows or eliminates the production of pollutants, often by switching to less harmful chemicals or processes Four R’s Reduce, reuse, refuse, recycle


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