Chapt01 Lecture
Chapt01 Lecture
Chapt01 Lecture
Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Learning Outcomes
After studying this chapter, you should be able to answer the following questions:
Describe several of the most important environmental problems facing the world. Are there signs of hope for solving these problems? What do we mean by sustainability and sustainable development? Why does science supportbut rarely proveparticular theories? How can scientists know if their research is reliable and important? How can critical thinking help us understand environmental issues? Explain how we can use graphs and statistics to answer questions in environmental science. What are some arguments for conservation or preservation of nature?
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Today we are faced with a challenge that calls for a shift in our thinking, so that humanity stops threatening its life-support system. Wangari Maathai, winner of 2004 Nobel Peace Prize
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The life sustaining ecosystems on which we all depend are unique in the universe, as far as we know.
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Environmental Problems
Climate change: Burning fossil fuels, making cement, cultivating rice paddies, clearing forests, and other human activities release carbon dioxide and other so-called greenhouse gases, which trap heat in the atmosphere.
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Environmental Problems
Air quality: Air quality has worsened dramatically in many areas Biodiversity loss: Biologists report that habitat destruction, overexploitation, pollution, and introduction of exotic organisms are eliminating species at a rate comparable to the great extinction that marked the end of the age of dinosaurs.
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Environmental Opportunities
Marine resources: Around the world, people who depend on seafood for their livelihood and sustenance are finding that setting aside marine reserves can restore fish populations as well as promote human development.
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Environmental Opportunities
Population has stabilized in most industrialized countries and even in some very poor countries where social security and democracy have been established.
Over the past 25 years, the average number of children born per woman worldwide has decreased from 6.1 to 2.6
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Conservation of forests and nature preserves: Deforestation has slowed in Asia, from more than 8 percent during the 1980s to less than 1 percent in the 1990s.
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Environmental Opportunities
Renewable energy: Encouraging progress is being made in a transition to renewable energy sources.
The European Union has announced a goal of obtaining 22 percent of its electricity and 12 percent of all energy from renewable sources by 2010.
Information: The increased speed at which information and technology now flow around the world holds promise that we can continue to find solutions to our environmental dilemmas.
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Experimental Design
A natural experiment, is one that involves observation of events that have already happened. Manipulative experiments have conditions deliberately altered, and all other variables are held constant. Blind experiments are often used, in which the researcher doesnt know which group is treated until after the data have been analyzed. In health studies, such as tests of new drugs, doubleblind experiments are used, in which neither the subject (who receives a drug or a placebo) nor the researcher knows who is in the treatment group and 1-32 who is in the control group.
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Modern Environmentalism
Rachel Carsons Silent Spring (1962) started the modern environmental movement. awakened the public to threats of pollution and toxic chemicals to humans as well as other species modern environmentalism extends concerns to include both natural resources and environmental pollution.
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Global Concerns
Increased travel and communication enables people to know about daily events in places unknown in previous generations.
Global environmentalism is the recognition that we share one environment that is common to all humans.
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Practice Quiz
1. Describe how fishing has changed at Apo Island, and the direct and indirect effects on peoples lives. 2. What are some basic assumptions of science? 3. Distinguish between a hypothesis and a theory. 4. Describe the steps in the scientific method. 5. What is probability? Give an example. 6. What does significance mean in statistics? 7. Whats the first step in critical thinking according to table 1.4? 8. Distinguish between utilitarian conservation and biocentric preservation. Name two environmental leaders associated with each of these philosophies. 9. Why do some experts regard water as the most critical natural resource for the twenty-first century? 10. Where in figure 1.7 do the largest areas of persistence of greening occur? What is persistence of greening? 11. Describe some signs of hope in overcoming global environmental problems. 12. What is the link between poverty and environmental quality? 13. Define sustainability and sustainable development.
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