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AP BIOLOGY:
Chapter Twenty-Eight Outline
HUMANITY VERSUS THE EARTH
Effects of Human Population Visible at Great Distance fig 28.1
Population Impacts the Environment
Total population of the earth in 1995 reached 5.7 billion
More people consume more food, water, energy and raw materials
More people create greater amount of waste
A GROWING POPULATION
Historical Perspective
Earliest fossils from Europe are 500,000 years old
Humans spread to North America 12,000 years ago
Population 10,000 years ago was only 5 million
With agriculture, populations rapidly expanded
More dependable sources of food fig 28.2
Development of towns and cities
Bubonic plague in 1348 killed nearly four-fifths of population fig 28.3
Recovery and increase to 500 million by 1650
Seventeenth century Renaissance renewed interest in science
Scientific developments led to Industrial Revolution
The Present Situation
Global birth rate for last 300 years: 30 per year per 1000 people
Present rate decreased slightly to 25 per 1000
Decreased death rate to 9 per 1000 people per year
Net increase in annual population rate
Population increasing at rate of 1.6% per year
Will double population in 43 years
Annual increase of 90 million per year
Increase per minute of 170 people
United Nation estimates population of 6 billion by 2000 AD
Expected stabilization at 8.5 to 18 billion by 2090
Must stabilize population due to limited resources
The Future Situation
Localization of human populations in year 2000
60% in tropical or subtropical regions
20% in China
20% in developed or industrialized nations
People in industrialized areas control 85% of wealth and materials
Standard of living 20 times higher
Lower infant mortality rate
Higher life expectancy
Variable world age structure affects population growth
Industrialized nations: 20% of population under 15 years
Developing countries have nearly twice as many fig 28.4
Populations of developing countries will continue to grow faster
Industrialized nations will constitute smaller portion of the global population
Quality of life dependent on stabilizing world`s population
THE FUTURE OF AGRICULTURE
Immediate World Challenge to Produce More Food
Food production increased by 2.6 times since 1950
Population expanded at greater rate
Most cultivatable land already in use
Topsoil lost from agricultural land
Consumption in developed countries increasing at greater rate
Must Increase Agricultural Productivity
Identify new crops, especially in tropics
Major crops have been cultivated for thousands of years
Few new plants cultivated since 1800
Examples: rubber and oil palms
Crops selected for ease of growth
Kinds of Agricultural Crops
Three primary food crops: corn, wheat, rice
5000 types have ever been used for food, only 150 used regularly
Various plants used for medical treatments
Reasons for cultivating new plants
Altered standards of cultivation
Extraction of industrial products, oils, drugs, chemicals
The Prospects for More Food
Must increase productivity of current crops
Improvement needed in tropical and subtropical regions
Improvement of strains via Green Revolution: 1950-1970
Ten-fold increase in Mexican wheat production
Food production in India outpaced population growth
China became self-sufficient in food production
Limitations of Green Revolution
Agricultural techniques require great energy output
Extensive use of costly pesticides and herbicides
Commercial prices held low in developing areas
Present solutions
Improve production of current crops
Not likely to bring more land into agricultural use
Fully apply traditional means of plant breeding and selection fig 28.6
Include wheat, corn and rice
Develop new crops in tropics and subtropics
Develop improved strains via genetic engineering
Resistance to specific herbicides results in better weed control
Tolerance to soil conditions and mineral toxicity
Ability to fix nitrogen
Use of hydroponic agriculture problematic
Resources of oceans are not inexhaustible
Reduce over fishing of specific areas
Develop new microorganism-based foods: Spirulina
OUR IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT
Nuclear Power
Chernobyl incident
One of four reactors exploded in April 1986
Emergency safety systems shut off
Power surge precipitated the explosion
Released over 100 megatons of radioactivity
Millions of times greater than Three Mile Island
Significant human exposure to radiation
Death due to radiation poisoning
The promise of nuclear power
Fossil fuels no longer cheap sources of energy
Nuclear power could provide new source
Undesirable side effects to burning fossil fuels
Produces sulfur and carbon dioxide
New problems associated with nuclear power
Safe operation of power plants
Disposal of radioactive wastes
Safe decommission of power plants
Prevention of terrorism and sabotage
Important to develop other alternative energy sources
Carbon Dioxide and Global Warming
CO2 in atmosphere maintains world temperature 25% higher than without it
Traps heat-producing infrared light
Creates greenhouse effect
Associated with increased energy use
Most gas from burning of fossil fuels
Burning of forests also increases atmospheric gas
Global warming results from increased CO2
Mean global temperature increased 1% since 1900
Masked by heat-absorbing capacity of oceans
Level of CO2 could double by 2035
Warming exacerbated by trace gases
Include chlorofluorocarbons
Absorb infrared wavelengths better than CO2
Ancillary problems
Rising sea levels
Altered growth rates in plants
Leads to global climate change
Pollution
Example: Rhine river
Fire in chemical warehouse washed chemicals into river
Deadly mercury and pesticides killed fish and plants
Water became unsafe to drink
River slowly cleaned itself
The Threat of Pollution
Results from industrial byproducts
Plastics cannot decompose
Efforts being made to develop new microorganisms yet unsuccessful
Water pollution
Not enough water to dispose of wastes
Detergents increase algae, decrease water quality
Agricultural pollution
Widespread use of pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers fig 28.7
Toxic chemicals remain in ecosystems
Chlorinated hydrocarbons banned in U.S.
Concentrate in the food chain
Must develop responsible attitude toward use of chemicals
Acid Precipitation
Sulfur compounds produced when coal burned fig 28.8
Mixes with atmospheric water to produce sulfuric acid
Acid dispersed by winds high up in atmosphere
Effects seen far from where acids are produced
Biological consequences
Death of thousands of fresh water lakes fig 28.9
Seepage into groundwater
Destruction of forests fig 28.10
Expensive to capture and remove emissions
The Ozone Hole
Visible to electronic equipment over Antarctica fig 28.11
Hole is nearly the size of the U.S.
Thinning of ozone layer first appeared in 1975
Presence of hole coincides with Antarctic spring
Cause of ozone hole attributed to chlorofluorocarbons (CFC's)
Chemicals used in cooling, fire extinguishers and styrofoam
CFC`s reduce O3 ozone molecule to O2 gas
Global agreements to halt CFC production
Problem will get worse because of quantity currently in lower atmosphere that will reach upper atmosphere in later years
Biological consequences
Increased ultraviolet light penetration
Increases incidence of human skin cancers
Damage to photosynthetic plankton
Destruction in the Tropics
Traditional method of shifting agriculture fig 28.12
Crops grow for only a few years in poor soils
Require decades without crops to rebuild nutrients
High population density does not permit renewal
No longer sufficient for even traditional manioc crop
Dead materials collected for firewood, not recycled
Forests being cleared at too great a rate
Equal to the size of Indiana per year
At the present rate they will be gone in thirty years
Need to change from one-use to continuous agriculture fig 28.13
The Loss of Biodiversity
Serious and rapidly accelerating problem
Given the loss of species of known plants and animals
Given the loss of habitat, especially in tropics
Calculate loss of 20% of biodiversity within in next 30 years
Loss greater considering we have named only 15% of world's eukaryotic organisms
Loss important for several reasons
Moral, ethical and aesthetic grounds
Organisms necessary to sustain our own existence
Opportunity to study them lost
Also lose potential benefits of these organisms
Upset balance of living communities and their physical environment
Effect soils, water regulation, nutrient cycles, atmosphere and climate, absorb pollution
Creating conditions of instability and unproductivity
Little known about overall ecology of communities and ecosystems
Cannot replace with systems that will support humans
Damage is currently irreparable
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Attempts to Find Solutions to Environmental Problems
Studied by environmental scientists
Applied science associated with ecology, geology, meteorology
Environmental Problems Can Be Solved fig 28.14
Assessment
Gathering information
Construct model of situation
Use model to predict future events
Risk analysis
Analyze environmental impact
Evaluate potential for solving problem
Determine adverse effects of solution
Public education
Address problem in terms the public can understand
Present alternative actions
Explain costs and results of various choices
Political action
Choice made through elected officials
Difficult to implement if multinational problems
Follow-through
Monitor results of environmental actions
Evaluate and improve initial analysis and modeling
WHAT BIOLOGISTS HAVE TO CONTRIBUTE
Environmental Problems Require Applications of Biological Principles
All living things need to use energy of the sun
Need to understand basic principles and their applications
Some areas of world are experiencing the future`s problems now
Scientific Education Is Necessary for Informed Decision Making
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