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WHAT'S ALL THE FUSS ABOUT SUSTAINABILITY? Dr. Wade Worthen Biology Department Furman University.

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Presentation on theme: "WHAT'S ALL THE FUSS ABOUT SUSTAINABILITY? Dr. Wade Worthen Biology Department Furman University."— Presentation transcript:

1 WHAT'S ALL THE FUSS ABOUT SUSTAINABILITY? Dr. Wade Worthen Biology Department Furman University

2 sustainability: "a characteristic of a process or state that can be maintained at a certain level indefinitely" - Wikipedia 2007

3 sustainability: "a characteristic of a process or state that can be maintained at a certain level indefinitely" - Wikipedia 2007 Bein’ able to keep doin’ what you been doin’

4 sustainability: " a characteristic of a process or state that can be maintained at a certain level indefinitely" - Wikipedia 2007 -In an expanding system, there are always more resources – sustainability is easy

5 - But in finite, bounded systems, resources will decline and limit the rate of the process UNLESS:

6 - they regenerate fast enough to meet demand

7 - But in finite, bounded systems, resources will decline and limit the rate of the process UNLESS: - they regenerate fast enough to meet demand - efficiency increases so less is needed

8 - But in finite, bounded systems, resources will decline and limit the rate of the process UNLESS: - they regenerate fast enough to meet demand - efficiency increases so less is needed - another resource is substituted

9 sustainability: "a characteristic of a process or state that can be maintained at a certain level indefinitely" - Wikipedia 2007 Human sustainability: "Meeting the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs." -Brundtland Commission - 1987

10 WHAT'S NOT SUSTAINABLE IN A FINITE, BOUNDED SYSTEM?

11 Continuous Growth… WHAT'S NOT SUSTAINABLE IN A FINITE, BOUNDED SYSTEM?

12 WHY IS THIS AN ISSUE NOW?

13 (NOW being the last 150 years!!!! J. Muir T. Roosevelt A.Leopold R. Carson J. Cousteau)

14 our population has been growing by using up resources and then substituting others...

15 - 1 billion:...to about 1850

16 - 2 billion: 1928 (about 78 yrs) Five Points - Atlanta

17 - 1 billion:...to about 1850 - 2 billion: 1928 (about 78 yrs) - 3 billion: 1960 (about 32 yrs)

18 - 1 billion:...to about 1850 - 2 billion: 1928 (about 78 yrs) - 3 billion: 1960 (about 32 yrs) - 5 billion: 1987 (about 15 yrs/billion) Ozone Hole - 2004

19 - 1 billion:...to about 1850 - 2 billion: 1928 (about 78 yrs) - 3 billion: 1960 (about 32 yrs) - 5 billion: 1987 (about 13 yrs) - currently 6.78 billion - adding about 220,000 people a day….today….

20 - 1 billion:...to about 1850 - 2 billion: 1928 (about 78 yrs) - 3 billion: 1960 (about 32 yrs) - 5 billion: 1987 (about 13 yrs) - currently 6.78 billion - adding about 220,000 people a day now... and 1/2 are living on less than $2/day... so there is already evidence that we are not "sustaining" our population...

21 "Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell." - Edward Abbey

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26 We are realizing that humans have become a planetary force as a consequence of: I = P x A x T IMPACT population affluence technology ?

27 We are realizing that humans have become a planetary force as a consequence of: I = P x A x T (depends on the technological goal!!) http://www.ejsd.org/public/journal_article/11

28 Because of our large population and powerful technologies, we are changing the characteristics of the planet – the only planet – we depend upon for physical and psychological sustenance and inspiration Human domination of the Earth's ecosystems (Vitousek et al. 1997).

29 And we realize that … Walt Kelly – 1970, for the first Earth Day poster

30 There is nowhere else to go.

31 Really.

32 There is nowhere else to go. We are stressing our life- support systems.

33 Really.

34 There is nowhere else to go. We are stressing our life- support systems. We are all in this together.

35 Really.

36 ECONOMY SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT Sustainability... "The term, in its current usage, refers to the potential longevity of vital human ecological life-support systems, such as agriculture, industry, forestry, fisheries, urban, and human communities in general." There is nowhere else to go. We are stressing our life- support systems. We are all in this together.

37 ECONOMY SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT There is nowhere else to go. We are stressing our life- support systems. We are all in this together. "When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe." - John Muir, My First Summer in the Sierra, 1911

38 TODAY: - our effects on the natural environment - why that is important - why biodiversity is important to sustainability - what we can do to maintain biodiversity - why we should appreciate biodiversity

39 Human Impacts on the Environment: Human domination of the Earth's ecosystems (Vitousek et al. 1997).

40 Land transformation: Forested Land – U. S.

41 Land transformation:

42 Mountaintop removal in West Virginia Humans are a geological force…

43 National Forest | National Park

44 Human are affecting 83% of the land surface area of the planet… converting forest to field and field to development

45 50% of the freshwater:

46 The Colorado, like the Nile, Yellow, and Rio Grande, doesn’t reach the ocean for months each year. All the water is diverted.

47 The Aral Sea, Kazakhstan 50% of the freshwater: Water diverted for agriculture in 1960; by 2007, Sea had shrunk by 90%

48 The Aral Sea, Kazakhstan 50% of the freshwater: - Salinization increased, killing the productive fisheries industry - Agricultural lands – salt increased 6X by 1994 the productivity had dropped by 20-50%.

49 Marine Fisheries: - Global fish catch is declining by 500,000 metric tons/yr from peak in 1987 (Science, 2003). - Predatory fish (tuna, salmon) and bottom fish (flounder, sole) have decreased by 90%. - Farmed fish are fed fish, so that doesn’t relieve the pressure

50 2009: 387 - We are affecting the climate of the planet: Highest in last 160,000 years…. (Entire history of Homo sapiens)

51 We are affecting the climate of the planet: All of recent increase in last 200 yrs…

52 We are affecting the climate of the planet: Plants can’t absorb it all…

53 We are affecting the climate of the planet: 1979 2003 2007 – lowest ever

54 We are affecting the climate of the planet: (thickness) - deep sea ice depth decreased from mean of 3.1 meters in 1958 to mean of 1.8 m in 1997 decrease area and depth; loss of 40% of the ICE VOLUME in 40 years (Science 1999).

55 We are affecting the climate of the planet: - Calving off the Larsen Ice Shelf in 2002; it’s 50 miles long and as big as Rhode Island… - Icebergs calving off Ross Shelf – April 2000 (B15 is 4,280 miles 2 – about the size of CONNECTICUT….)

56 We are affecting the climate of the planet: - Antarctic air temps have risen by 0.5 o C/decade for the last 50 years; 10x faster than the global average. - Even then, air temp change, alone, can’t explain this ice loss. - The ocean is also warming, melting these shelves from the bottom. As such, given the thermal momentum that exists in the ocean, these shelves will be gone by the end of the century. Shepherd et al., Science 302: 856-859.

57 We are affecting the climate of the planet: Sea level rise density 0 4 Temp o C

58 We are affecting the climate of the planet: And we are a coastal species…

59 - Changes in Plant Growth: Crops if CO 2 at 550 ppm We are affecting the climate of the planet:

60 -Changes in Plant Growth: Crops if CO 2 at 550 ppm We are affecting the climate of the planet: And we will grow in just the wrong areas…

61 Permafrost is defined solely by temperature. Any rock or soil remaining at or below 0°C for two or more years is permafrost. Permafrost can contain 0- 30% ice. We are affecting the climate of the planet: And there may be some nasty non-linearities…

62 14% of the world’s organic carbon is stored in permafrost. As the poles warm (and they are warming faster than anywhere else), this will thaw. - and when it melts, marshes are created where anaerobic bacteria dominate, breaking the organics into Methane, not CO 2 … and methane is a worse greenhouse gas… This is a type of threshold response (not a gradual response), and would involve positive feedback loops…the warmer it gets, the more permafrost melts, and the warmer it gets… We are affecting the climate of the planet: And there may be some nasty non-linearities… transfer of carbon to atmosphere temp 0 C 0 BURP!

63 We are affecting the climate of the planet: Things are hotter and drier… In Western U.S., snow pack has declined dramatically, corresponding to a 30%-60% reduction in stream water.

64 We are affecting the climate of the planet: Things are hotter and drier… In Western U.S., snow pack has declined dramatically, corresponding to a 30%-60% reduction in stream water. Snowmelt begins much earlier; making spring floods and drier summers. Service, 2004. Science 303:1124-1127.

65 We are affecting the climate of the planet: Things are hotter and drier… In Western U.S., snow pack has declined dramatically, corresponding to a 30%-60% reduction in stream water. Snowmelt begins much earlier; making spring floods and drier summers. Service, 2004. Science 303:1124-1127. And what might you expect as the land gets hotter and drier??

66 We are affecting the climate of the planet: Things will get hotter and drier… Increase in fire frequency and size over the last 10 years…$3 billion to fight fires in the west, 2X amount ten years ago

67 We are affecting the climate of the planet: And this will affect other organisms… -Changes in Reef Communities: “Almost 15% of the world's reefs are already beyond repair thanks to global warming. Another 30% may be lost over the next 30 years.” – (Nature, February 2004) - Reefs are home to 25% of all marine species - Reefs are nursery areas for the larvae and fry of commercially important fish and crustacean species - Reefs are important storm breaks for tropical coasts

68 We are affecting the climate of the planet: And this will affect other organisms… -Change in Ocean Food Webs: - Phytoplankton have shifted northward in Atlantic with warming of surface waters. -They provide ½ global NPP -They are critical to food webs -Shift north may affect zooplankton and perhaps major fisheries. Richardson and Schoeman, 2004, Science 305:1609-1612

69 We are affecting the climate of the planet: And this will affect other organisms… - Adding CO 2 to atmosphere creates carbonic acid in water - Acidification of sea water reduces calcium carbonate production by marine organisms (coccolithophores, corals, molluscs.) Orr, et al., 2005. Nature. 437:681-686.

70 15-37% of terrestrial species may go extinct in the next 50 years, largely because of global warming. (Thomas et al. 2004) A 3 o C temp rise will wipe out 80% of alpine islands, and extinguish 1/3 to ½ of 613 known alpine plants. As treelines rise and alpine tundra declines, so do animals like marmots and pika. Krajick, K. 2004. Science 303:1600-1602 A B C A B C We are affecting the climate of the planet: And this will affect other organisms…

71 Our growth, in our bounded system, is at the cost of other species 40% of primary productivity (E) Iowa - arrow pointing to forest fragment

72 Our growth, in our bounded system, is at the cost of other species 40% of primary productivity (E) Massive extinction should be no surprise

73 TODAY: - our effects on the planetary environment - why that is important - why biodiversity is important to sustainability - what we can do to maintain biodiversity - why we should appreciate biodiversity

74 What do we want for the future? - - - -

75

76 “I want world peace…”

77 What do we want for the future? - World Peace - - -

78 “Democracy is the government of the people, by the people, for the people…”

79 What do we want for the future? - World Peace - stable, moral governments - -

80 Woo- hoo!!

81 What do we want for the future? - World Peace - stable, moral governments - stable, productive economies -

82

83 What do we want for the future? - World Peace - stable, moral governments - stable, productive economies - stable, productive food supplies

84 How can we get there? - A stable, productive food supply Stable, productive economies Stable, productive, moral governments Peace and happiness for our children

85 How can we get there? stable food supply productive economies Happy people stable, moral governments To achieve ONE goal, we must achieve ALL goals...

86 Wouldn’t it be nice? I want environmental, economic, and social sustainability to achieve world peace!

87 It won’t be easy…..

88 ECONOMY SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT Remember why?

89 For example… “Save the Amazon rainforest!!!!”

90 How does Brazil get out from under it's huge international debt?

91 What to do with the unemployed and urban poor? (22% live on less than $2) Unemployment

92 Solution - offer them land to settle in the Amazon but there is rampant exploitation - relocate poor to servitude of others

93 These are incredibly TOUGH, COMPLEX problems.... but they won't just go away if we ignore them...

94 TODAY: - our effects on the planetary environment - why that is important - why biodiversity is important to sustainability - what we can do to maintain biodiversity - why we should appreciate biodiversity

95 Why is biodiversity important? The earth is truly a living planet; life changes the conditions of the earth. Releases oxygen to the atmosphere Transfers carbon to the lithosphere Atmosphere Hydro/Lithosphere Biosphere

96 Why is biodiversity important? The earth is truly a living planet; life changes the conditions of the earth. Releases oxygen to the atmosphere Transfers carbon to the lithosphere Atmosphere Hydro/Lithosphere Biosphere Life: Cleans our water Makes our food Cleans our air

97 LIFE is composed of lots of living things = biodiversity Diversity is the number and relative abundance of species in a habitat

98 We have named approximately 1.5 million species…

99 There may be as many as 10-30 million more… Many habitats, like tall forest canopies and the deep sea have not been well sampled…

100 The diversity of life is truly staggering…

101 And we are learning that diversity improves ecosystem function

102 Why is ecosystem function important?

103 Estimates of various Ecosystem Services - $U.S. billions Ecosystem services Value (trillion $US) Soil formation17.1 Recreation3.0 Nutrient cycling2.3 Water regulation and supply2.3 Climate regulation (temperature and precipitation) 1.8 Habitat1.4 Flood and storm protection1.1 Food and raw materials production0.8 Genetic resources0.8 Atmospheric gas balance0.7 Pollination0.4 All other services1.6 Total value of ecosystem services33.3 Source: Adapted from R. Costanza et al., “The Value of the World’s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital,” Nature, Vol. 387 (1997), p. 256, Table 2. TOTAL GLOBAL GNP (1997) = 18 trillion.

104 Productivity is the energy that an organism absorbs and stores as tissue – as biomass/growth. (And not the energy that the organism spends to move or keep their cells alive…). So, for humans, ecosystem productivity is food.

105 Biodiversity INCREASES productivity

106 - Sampling Effects More diverse communities are more likely to contain the most productive species, and thus raise the total productivity.

107 Biodiversity INCREASES productivity - Sampling Effects - Niche Complementarity More diverse communities are more likely to contain different types of species that use different types of energy... thus more efficiently harvesting all the available energy and converting it to productivity.

108 Monoculture They all need the same things at the same concentrations; they compete.

109 MonoculturePolyculture Combinations of different plants can be planted at higher density, and they use different "niches" and coexist. Even if abundance of "most productive" species drops, this loss can be offset. They all need the same things at the same concentrations; they compete.

110 Biodiversity INCREASES productivity - Sampling Effects - Niche Complementarity - Positive Effects Some species have beneficial effects on others, and so their presence promotes diversity and productivity.

111 MonoculturePolyculture Nitrogen fixing legumes (beans) nutrify the soil, increasing the growth of other plants. And you have beans! without beans with beans They all need the same things at the same concentrations; they compete.

112 Diversity and Productivity in a Long-Term Grassland Experiment Tilman, et al. 2001. Science 294. 843 - 845 Dotted line is biomass in a monoculture of the most productive species. Higher productivity than this, at higher richness values, means niche complementarity or positive effects must be occurring.

113 Diversity INCREASES productivity Diversity can increase stability

114 Diversity INCREASES productivity Diversity can increase stability Types of stability: resistance to change

115 Diversity INCREASES productivity Diversity can increase stability Types of stability: resistance to change resilience after change

116 Diversity INCREASES productivity Diversity can increase stability Types of stability: resistance to change resilience after change Diverse communities are less susceptible to one particular disturbance (like one species of pest, or fire, or flood), because multiple species are unlikely to be sensitive to the same thing.

117 Example 1: Bird “Flu” People can get a virus (West Nile Virus), carried by mosquitoes, from birds…

118 Example 1: Bird “Flu” People can get a virus (West Nile Virus), carried by mosquitoes, from birds… SOME birds are good reservoirs… Crows, Blue Jays, Sparrows, and Robins

119 Example 1: Bird “Flu” So people in communities with low bird diversity, dominated by these species, have high rates of Bird Flu! ( because mosquitoes are likely to hit an infected bird and transmit to humans)

120 Example 1: Bird “Flu” People in communities with high bird diversity means a lower percentage of these species, and mosquitoes are less likely to hit them and get infected because there are OTHER species to feed on! Fewer sick people!

121 Example 2: Rainforest Diverse communities may be resilient unless completely removed….

122 Decomposition rapid Absorption rapid Volatiles released Stimulate condensation and precipitation Rainforests feed themselves and water themselves. Example 2: Rainforests

123 CUT FOREST DOWN REDUCE RAINFALL... REDUCE NUTRIENTS INCREASE FIRE Select for fire- adapted grasses.... rainforest may not come back....

124 RAINFOREST (wet, few fires) GRASSLAND (dry, many fires) "Multiple Stable States"

125 We are dependent on the environment for food and resources. Ideally, we would like a STABLE, PRODUCTIVE supply of these resources.... right?? FEAST FAMINE

126 (We don't want "boom and bust", "feast and famine" scenarios....) FEAST FAMINE

127 We are dependent on the environment for food and resources. Ideally, we would like a STABLE, PRODUCTIVE supply of these resources.... right?? (We don't want "boom and bust", "feast and famine" scenarios....) STABILITY PRODUCTIVITY ?

128 We are dependent on the environment for food and resources. Ideally, we would like a STABLE, PRODUCTIVE supply of these resources.... right?? (We don't want "boom and bust", "feast and famine" scenarios....) STABILITY PRODUCTIVITY DIVERSITY …riiight… : )

129 TODAY: - our effects on the natural environment - why that is important - why biodiversity is important to sustainability - what we can do to maintain biodiversity? - why should we appreciate biodiversity?

130 So, how do we preserve biodiversity? - Larger areas have more species than small areas

131 PLANTS HERBIVORES CARNIVORES LARGE AREA OF HABITAT Area Effects So, how do we preserve biodiversity? - Larger areas have more species than small areas

132 HABITAT FRAGMENTATION So, how do we preserve biodiversity? - Larger areas have more species than small areas

133 HABITAT FRAGMENTATION Carnivores can’t be supported; competition reduces diversity among herbivores, plants overgrazed. So, how do we preserve biodiversity? - Larger areas have more species than small areas

134 So, how do we preserve biodiversity? - Larger areas have more species than small areas - Larger areas lose fewer species over time

135 So, how do we preserve biodiversity? - Larger areas have more species than small areas - Larger areas lose fewer species over time - Larger areas are less susceptible to disturbance

136 So, how do we preserve biodiversity? - Larger areas have more species than small areas - Larger areas lose fewer species over time - Larger areas are less susceptible to disturbance - Larger areas recover more rapidly after disturbance

137 So, how do we preserve biodiversity? - Larger areas have more species than small areas - Larger areas lose fewer species over time - Larger areas are less susceptible to disturbance - Larger areas recover more rapidly after disturbance - How large is large?

138 Bigger than these……

139 We need to rethink our model of community… Development nature Development

140 And we need to care…

141 TODAY: - our effects on the natural environment - why that is important - why biodiversity is important to sustainability - what we can do to maintain biodiversity? - why should we appreciate biodiversity?

142 nature is important to each person, even at an unconscious level.

143 E. O. Wilson (1984) defined biophilia as “an innate tendency of humans to focus on life and lifelike processes…

144 Biophilia: We are interested in living things…

145 Biophilia: There is an adaptive benefit to this interest that has been selected for over hominid evolution…

146 Biophilia: This relationship influences how we learn …

147 Biophilia: And who we are…

148 Consider that the human mind and its products have not arisen in a vacuum.

149 Nature evolution

150 5.0 mya 1.75 mya tools art 0.2 mya burial 75,000 Understanding Human Evolution. 1999. Poirier and McKee agriculture 10,000 …to chimps 99.6% before art “Pre-cultural Baggage”

151 As such, our interaction with art, society, and nature may have a biologically interesting contribution. (NOT single factor biological determinism, please!) Let’s examine the evidence for Biophilia in our endeavors: Humanities Social Sciences Natural Sciences

152 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘A’ is for _____________. ‘B’ is for _____________. ‘C’ is for _____________. ‘D’ is for _____________. ‘E’ is for _____________. ‘F’ is for _____________.

153 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘A’ is for _____________. - antidisestablishmentarianism?

154 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘A’ is for _____________. - antidisestablishmentarianism?

155 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘A’ is for _____________. - antidisestablishmentarianism?

156 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘B’ is for _____________.

157 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘B’ is for _____________.

158 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘C’ is for _____________.

159 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘C’ is for _____________.

160 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘D’ is for _____________.

161 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘D’ is for _____________.

162 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘E’ is for _____________.

163 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘E’ is for _____________.

164 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘F’ is for _____________.

165 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language A ‘first alphabet’ book….. ‘F’ is for _____________.

166 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language Adjectives and similes….. Sly as _________

167 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language Adjectives and similes….. Sly as _________ an Enron executive?

168 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language Adjectives and similes….. Sly as _________

169 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Language Adjectives and similes….. busy as __________? Strong as ________ ? Weak as _________ ?

170 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities – Language Verbs: To ‘cow’To ‘quail’ To ‘clam up’To ‘weasel’ To ‘outfox’To ‘hound’ To ‘hog’To ‘grouse’ To ‘fawn’To ‘buffalo’

171 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities – Language Summary – “Human intelligence is bound to the presence of animals. They are the means by which cognition takes shape and they are the instruments for imagining abstract ideas and qualities…they are basic to the development of speech and thought.” -Shepard 1978 Trivial examples or basic, fundamental examples?

172 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Art -Language and the arts are dependent on natural imagery to evoke a particular emotion….. Autumn Landscape at Dusk – Vincent Van Gogh

173 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Religion Animals are central to the myths that give our lives meaning and our culture context. In particular, the serpent figures prominently as an icon of power, knowledge, life, and death. Egyptians – the Earth as an Egg, grasped by a serpent

174 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Religion Middle East – Judaism – Eve and the serpent

175 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Religion Greeks – Gaia (Earth) was protected by her son, Python, who lived at the center of the world and held it together

176 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Religion Australian aboriginal culture – the rainbow serpent – art dates from 6000 years ago

177 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Religion Norse –dragons and Jormungand, the world serpent – (an ouroborus).

178 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities - Religion Aztecs – Quetzalcoatl, the ‘bird-serpent’ or “feathered serpent”

179 Evidence for Biophilia in the Humanities – Summary "Animals are far more fundamental to our thinking than we supposed. They are not just a part of the fabric of thought: they are a part of the loom." (Peter Steinhart, 1989). (Native American ouroboric image)

180 Navajo Dance Silver tip fox cape with foot clasp

181 Evidence for Biophilia in the Social Sciences - Sociology Animals are our cultural icons, we use them for tribal affiliation, both trivial…. NFL Football Team Mascots: Cardinals Falcons Ravens Bills PanthersBears Bengals Broncos Lions Colts Jaguars Dolphins Eagles Seahawks Rams 15 of 32 teams (not that it helps….)

182 Evidence for Biophilia in the Social Sciences - Sociology And significant…

183 Evidence for Biophilia in the Social Sciences - Psychology - phobias are usually related to natural cues: (snakes, spiders, water, closed spaces, heights) (and other primates that encounter snakes are ophidophobes)

184 Evidence for Biophilia in the Social Sciences - Psychology - even though cultures have produced more deadly risks

185 Evidence for Biophilia in the Social Sciences - Psychology -habitat selection – humans with the resources build homes on promontories near water, with a view The Vanderbilt Estate, “The Breakers”, Newport, RI

186 Evidence for Biophilia in the Social Sciences - Psychology Societies construct gardens, parks, and green spaces in urban environments – like Central Park, NYC.

187 Evidence for Biophilia in the Social Sciences - Psychology We need nature, and we take it with us into man- made environments; it is a part of what we are, and it has shaped who we are and how we identify ourselves, individually and collectively. Rooftop Garden, TokyoTokyo

188 Evidence of Biophilia in the Natural Sciences - Physiology - contact with people helps development and healing - contact with animals helps stress and healing, and gives us someone who depends upon us.

189 Evidence of Biophilia in the Natural Sciences - Physiology - vistas - people with a natural view are less stressed and are more productive. - inner city children with a view of a park are able to concentrate in school and are better learners.

190 What are the ramifications of biophilia? Humans need nature as a reference to completely express our humanity. It is at once the “other” and the “self”. To lose it, or to simplify it, will profoundly affect what and who we are.

191 “It is interesting to contemplate an entangled bank, clothed with many plants of many kinds…

192 “with birds singing on the bushes, with various insects flitting about, and with worms crawling through the damp earth…

193 “and to reflect that these elaborately constructed forms, so different from each other, and dependent on each other in so complex a manner….

194 “have all been produced by laws acting around us…There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or one….

195 “and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.” Charles Darwin, 1859, “The Origin of Species”

196 If we recognize the grandeur, we might appreciate it…

197 If we appreciate it, we might value it…

198 If we value it, we might sustain it…

199 If we sustain it, we might be able to sustain our societies and economies, as well. ECONOMY SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT

200 If we don’t, we won’t…


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