houston community college. dr.jalaluddin qureshi environmental interrelation ships

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HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE . DR.JALALUDDIN QURESHI ENVIRONMENTAL INTERRELATION SHIPS

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  • Slide 1
  • HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE. DR.JALALUDDIN QURESHI ENVIRONMENTAL INTERRELATION SHIPS
  • Slide 2
  • Environmental Science Chapter 1 Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
  • Slide 3
  • CHAPTER 1 Environmental Interrelationships Environmental Science A Study of Interrelationships Enger & Smith
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  • Outline 1.1 The Nature of Environmental Science 1.2 Emerging Global Issues 1.3 Human Well-Being and the Environment
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  • 1.1 The Nature of Environmental Science Environmental science is interdisciplinary, and includes scientific and social aspects of human impact on the world. It is a mixture of traditional science, individual and societal values, and political awareness.
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  • 1.1 The Nature of Environmental Science Environment is everything that affects an organism during its lifetime. Environmental science
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  • Interrelatedness Is a Core Concept The study of environmental science is so interesting, frustrating, and challenging because of the interrelatedness among seeming unrelated factors. Tug on anything at all and youll find it connected to everything else in the universe. John Muir Charles Darwin proposed that seed production in red clover was related to the number of cats in the area.
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  • Figure 01_02
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  • Interrelatedness Is a Core Concept The reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park has resulted in many changes. 31 wolves were introduced in 1995. In 1996 there were about 320 wolves. The wolves have caused water flow changes in the park, increases in willow and aspen trees, as well as songbirds, foxes, certain rodents, hawks, and owls. Coyote and elk have declined.
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  • Interrelatedness Is a Core Concept The Yellowstone wolves are connected to social, economic, and political realms of human activity. It was important to environmentalists and biologists to restore the wolf to its former habitat. Ranchers could lose money if wolves killed livestock. The farm lobby fought long and hard in congress to prevent the reintroduction. A fund was developed to pay ranchers for cattle killed by wolves.
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  • An Ecosystem Approach An ecosystem is a region in which the organisms and the physical environment form an interacting unit. The task of an environmental scientist is to recognize and understand the natural interactions that take place, and to integrate these with the uses humans must make of the natural world.
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  • 1.2 Emerging Global Issues Environmental change threatens peoples health, physical security, material needs, and social cohesion.
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  • Figure 01_03a
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  • Figure 01_03b
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  • 1.2 Emerging Global Issues The World Commission on Environment and Development (Brundtland Commission) concluded 25 years ago that humanity has the ability to make development sustainable.
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  • Figure 01_05
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  • Environmental Governance Trade, economic development, good governance, transfer of technology, science and education policies, and globalization have become even more central to sustainable development. Development strategies need to maintain the ecosystem needs on which long-term development goals depend. Hurricane Katrina in 2005 demonstrated the link between destruction of coastal wetlands and vulnerability to storms.
  • Slide 18
  • Environmental Governance Most social and political decisions are made with respect to political jurisdictions, but environmental problems do not necessarily coincide with these artificial human made political boundaries. Air pollution generated in China affects air quality in western coastal states in the United States and in British Columbia, Canada. Air pollution generated in Juarez, Mexico, causes problems in the neighboring city of EI Paso, Texas
  • Slide 19
  • Environmental Governance Eight U.S. states, two Canadian provinces, and hundreds of local jurisdictions impact environmental decisions in the Great Lakes on pollution, exotic species, fishing, and land use.
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  • 1.3 Human Well-Being and the Environment The end point of development is human well-being. Human well-being and the quality of the environment are strongly interrelated. Environmental changes have impacts on human wellbeing.
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  • Defining Human Well-Being Resources people have, such as money and other assets. The environment is seen only as a means to promote economic growth. How people feel about their lives, including the cultural importance that environment has for life satisfaction. What people are able to be and to do. This multidimensional view focuses on what the environment allows individuals to be and to do.
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  • Defining Human Well-Being
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  • Figure 01_06b
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  • Defining Human Well-Being Ecosystem services include Provisioning services: food, water Regulating services: flood control, disease control Cultural services: spiritual, recreational, and cultural benefits Supporting services: nutrient cycling The worlds poorest people depend primarily on environmental goods and services for their livelihoods.
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  • Environment and Health The World Health Organization estimates that 13 million deaths worldwide could be prevented every year by environmental improvement. Cancer Malaria Coronary Heart Disease Diarrhea
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  • Environment and Health Urban air pollution affects health in almost every region of the world.
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  • Figure 01_07a
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  • Figure 01_07b
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  • Environment and Security Security means having stable and reliable access to resources and the ability to be secure from natural and human disasters. Scarcity of water or other resources can lead to armed conflicts.
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  • Figure 01_08
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  • Environment and Globalization Globalization of trade has led to the spread of exotic species. Zebra Mussel in North America
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  • Figure 01_08c
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  • Environment and Globalization The first worldwide meeting of heads of state directed toward the environment took place at the Earth Summit (United Nations Conference on Environment and Development) in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. Most countries at the conference signed agreements on sustainable development and biodiversity.
  • Slide 34
  • Environment and Globalization In 1997, representatives from 125 nations met in Kyoto, Japan for the Third Conference of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. The Kyoto Protocol is viewed as one of the most important steps to date in environmental protection and international diplomacy.
  • Slide 35
  • Environment and Globalization The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment was completed in 2005. As the human population grows, it puts pressure on the natural ecosystems of the world. Most ecosystems are being negatively affected. Food production has increased at the expense of soil loss due to erosion, conversion of natural ecosystems to managed systems, and overconsumption of water.
  • Slide 36
  • Energy and the Environment Threat of inadequate and insecure supplies of energy at affordable prices. Threat of environmental damage due to overconsumption of energy.
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  • Energy and the Environment Global increases in carbon dioxide emissions are primarily due to fossil fuel use. Fossil fuels met 82% of the worlds energy demand in 2010.
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  • Figure 01_10b
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  • 10 Things You Can Do to Protect Your Environment 1. Reduce driving 2. Save electricity 3. Recycle 4. Conserve water 5. Safely dispose of hazardous waste
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  • 10 Things You Can Do to Protect Your Environment 6. Eat locally 7. Donate reusable items 8. Buy in bulk 9. Learn how to avoid the use of insect repellants 10. Be an informed and active citizen
  • Slide 41
  • Summary Environmental science involves science, economics, ethics, and politics in arriving at solutions to environmental problems. Because ecosystems do not coincide with political boundaries, a regional approach to solving environmental problems is ideal. Each region of the world has certain environmental issues that are of primary concern because of the mix of population, resource use patterns, and culture.
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  • Text Art 01_01
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  • Text Art 01_02