Transcript Slide 1
Humans in the
Biosphere
PFHS Biology – Chapter 6
Things Change
Hunting and gathering
Hunted, fished,
gathered fruits, nuts,
berries, seeds, etc
Nomadic
Few demands upon the
environment and
allowed resupply
Things Change
Agriculture
Domesticated plants and
animals and grew supplies
Stayed in 1 place
Stable/predictable food
supply
Larger stable settlements
Elements of civilization
Government, laws
writing
Things Change
Green revolution
Equipment/machinery
Improved seed and
techniques
Fertilizers and pesticides
Doubled food production
in 50 years
Less manpower = death
of rural areas
Things Change
Industrial Revolution
Mechanization and
factories
Urbanization to provide
workforce
Reliance on fossil fuels
Overcrowding/ Pollution
Demands on the
environment
Evils of society ?
Resources
Renewable –
regenerated or
replenished faster
than used
Water, wood fiber,
cattle, windpower
Resources
Non-renewable –
cannot be
replenished by
natural processes or
is so slow as to
eliminate it as usable
Fossil fuels,
minerals, metals
Sustainable Development
Human activities can affect the quality
and supply of renewable resources such
as land, forests, fisheries, air, and fresh
water
Development must provide for our needs
while maintaining ecosystem goods and
services that are renewable
Land Resources
Space for communities
Raw materials for industry
Soil for agriculture
Dangers
Erosion
desertification
Forest Resources
Important products – lumber, paper,
furniture, fuel, food, etc.
Oxygen/carbon balance
Diversity of habitats
Moderate climate
Limit soil erosion
Protect fresh water supplies
Forest Resources
Management
Sustainable management practices
Plant/grow/harvest/grow/harvest/plant cycles
Dangers
Deforestation – removing forest permanently
for other uses (or no use at all)
Fire – destruction of uses, may lead to
deforestation
See previous page
The most
forested of the
Rocky Mt. states
Fishery Resources
Invaluable food
source
Overfishing/pollution
has damaged it
Commercial use has
developed limits
Aquaculture is
becoming popular,
but has its own
problems/dangers
Air Resources
Do we actually have
to discuss the
importance of this
resource?
Air Resources
Dangers
Pollutant – a substance where it doesn’t
belong
Natural
Man made
Smog – smoke+fog, a polluting haze
Acid rain – pollutants dissolved into the
atmospheric water vapor, falls, DAMAGES
The list of pollution types is endless
Freshwater Resources
Another one that
really needs no
explanation
Water Uses
Biodiversity
Variety in living things
One of our greatest natural resources
Foods, industrial products, medicines provided
by a variety of organisms
Some future life-saving substances may come
from organisms that have not been discovered
yet
Watch the video “The Medicine Man” with Elaine
Bracco and Sean Connery
Threats to Biodiversity
Extinction – permanent disappearance of
a species
Endangered species – declining in a way
that extinction is a definite possibility
Threatened species – suffering a
dangerous decline in numbers
Human activity is a major threat
Hunting, fishing, pollution, introduction of
foreign species, and alteration of habitat
Introduced species
Little known threat
Become invasive species that reproduce
rapidly because they no longer have their
“natural controls” from their original
environment
Successfully outcompete the native
species
Conserving Biodiversity
Today, conservation efforts focus on
protecting entire ecosystems as well as
single species. That ensuresthat the
natural habitats and the interactions of
many different species are preserved at
the same time.
The biggest challenge – time and $$$
Biggest Concerns
Ozone depletion – leading to more UV
exposure…..which leads to skin cancers,
eye damage, plant damage, and reduced
resistance to disease
Can we make the switch to non-CFC
substances?
Will the ozone repair itself?
Biggest Concerns
Global Warming – a rise in the Earth’s
average temperature
It is both natural and manmade:
Natural cycles of sun and earth
Enhanced greenhouse effect from man’s
activities
The End……… of
this presentation