powerpoint ® slides prepared by jay withgott and heidi marcum ch 1 part 1: foundations of...

61
PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science ight © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings An Introduction to Environmental Science

Upload: sherman-collins

Post on 29-Dec-2015

261 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

PowerPoint® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum

Ch 1

Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

An Introduction to Environmental Science

Page 2: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Major Themes of Environmental Science

Human population growthAn urbanizing worldSustainability of our population and all of naturePeople and natureA global perspectiveScience and values

Page 3: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Gaia Hypothesis

The belief that Earth has it’s own lifecycle Elephants kill trees Volcano’s erupt Lightning causes fires Global warming and cooling happened before without

humans

The actions of many groups of people at many locations affects the environment of the entire world. (CFC’s)

Gaia hypothesis James Lovelock and Lynn Margulis Life affects the environment at a global level

Page 4: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Environment: the total of our surroundings

• All the things around us with which we interact:• Living things - biotic

• Animals, plants, forests, fungi, etc.• Nonliving things – abiotic (Natural)

• Continents, oceans, clouds, soil, rocks, wind• Our built environment (Man-made)

• Buildings, human-created living centers, roads, transportation

Page 5: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Humans and the world around us

Humans change the environment, often in ways not fully understood. Ex. Pest Control, weed killers

We depend completely on the environment for survival Increased wealth, health, mobility, leisure time But, natural systems have been degraded

i.e., pollution, erosion and species extinction Environmental changes threaten long-term health and

survivalEnvironmental science is the study of:

How the natural world works How the environment affects humans and vice versa

Ecology – The study of the environment

Page 6: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Natural resources: vital to human survival

Renewable resources: Perpetually available: sunlight, wind, wave energy Renew themselves over short periods: timber, water, soil

These can be destroyed Nonrenewable resources: can be depleted (May be renewable???)

Oil, coal, minerals (not in our lifetime)

Natural resources = substances and energy sources needed for survival

Page 7: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Sustainability and Carrying Capacity

What is the maximum number of people the Earth can sustain?

Currently we are using resources unsustainably. (30%) Faster than they can be replenished.

Carrying capacity = the maximum number of individuals of a species that can be sustained by an environment w/o decreasing the capacity of the environment to

sustain that same amount in the future

Page 8: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

SustainabilitySustainability refers to resources and

their environment.Sustainable resource harvest

Same quantity of that resource can be harvested each year for an unlimited amount of time. (Trees – Silviculture)

Sustainable ecosystem An ecosystem from which we are harvesting a

resource that is still able to maintain its essential functions/properties. (Forest)

Page 9: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Sustainable Global Economy

To achieve we must Develop an effective population-control strategy.

(Controversial… legal? Terra Nova) Completely restructure our energy programs. (Big

Oil??) Institute economic planning that will encourage

pop control and wise use of resources. Implement social, legal, political and educational

change.

Page 10: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Terra Nova Policy?

Page 11: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Moving Toward Sustainability

The new paradigm Evolutionary rather than revolutionary. Inclusive, not exclusive. Proactive, not reactive. Attracting, not attacking. Assisting the disadvantage, not taking advantage.

Page 12: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Global human population growth

More than 7 billion humans

Why so many humans? Agricultural revolution

Stable food supplies Industrial revolution

Urbanized society powered by fossil fuels

Sanitation and medicines

More food

Page 13: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Thomas Malthus and human population

• Thomas Malthus• Population growth must

be restricted, or it will outstrip food production

• Starvation, war, disease• Predator-prey

relationships• Neo-Malthusians

• Population growth has disastrous effects

• Paul and Anne Ehrlich, The Population Bomb (1968)

Page 14: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Garrett Hardin’s Tragedy of the Commons

•Unregulated exploitation leads to resource depletion

• Soil, air, water

•Resource users are tempted to increase use until the resource is gone•Solution?

• Private ownership?• Voluntary organization to enforce responsible

use?• Governmental regulations?

Page 15: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

The “ecological footprint”

The environmental impact of a person or population Amount of biologically

productive land + water for raw materials and to

dispose/recycle waste

Overshoot: humans have surpassed the Earth’s capacity

We are using 30% more of the planet’s resources than are available on a sustainable basis!

Page 16: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Population Graphs

Page 17: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Exponential growth

Page 18: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Logistic Graph / S-Curve

Page 19: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Overpopulation

Birth RateMortality RateTotal PopulationPopulation DensityImmigrationEmigrationCatastrophic Ecents

Page 20: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Rule of 70

AKA Doubling timeDoubling time = 70/ Growth Rate (PGR)PGR = Net Gain (NG)/ total populationNG = Birth Rate – Death Rate + immigration-

emigrationClassic Example = 7% growth rate – double

time = 10 years

Page 21: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Homework for Thursday

Pick 2 countries Find birth rate, death rate, total population

Find 2 other countries with a positive growth rate

Find 1 country with a negative growth rateFind 10 megacities (populations of 8 million

+)

Page 22: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Environmental science

… can help us avoid mistakes made by past civilizations.

The lesson of Easter Island: people annihilated their culture by destroying their environment. Can we act more wisely to conserve our resources?

Page 23: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Easter Island

Named from Dutch Sailors who landed on Easter Sunday

http://www.gns.cri.nz/Home/Our-Science/Environment-Climate/Environmental-Change/Research/Easter-Island-collapse

Page 24: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Definitions

Limiting factors - things that prevent a population from growing any larger. Disease, food supply, natural factors, humans, predation,

nutrients

Biotic Potential - An estimate of the maximum capacity of living things to survive and reproduce under optimal environmental conditions.Continues forever.

Page 25: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

S-Curve - Labels

Exponential growth, transitional phase (lag time), Plateau phase, carrying capacity, maximum sustainable yield

Page 26: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Precautionary Principle

1992 - Rio Earth Summit on Sustainable Development

Defined PP – when there is a great threat of serious environmental damage we should not wait for scientific proof before taking precautionary steps to prevent potential harm.

Page 27: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Precautionary Principle

PP is a proactive, rather than a reactive, tool.

Adopted by the city of SF and the European Union

Page 28: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Placing a Value on the Environment

The value of the environment based on 8 justifications Utilitarian Ecological Aesthetic Recreational

-- Inspirational Creative Moral Cultural

Page 29: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Placing a Value on the Environment

Utilitarian- the environment has value because it benefits individuals economically or is necessary for human survival.

Ecological- ecosystem is necessary for survival of some species of interest or that the system itself provides benefit.

Page 30: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Placing a Value on the Environment

Aesthetic- has to do with our appreciation of the beauty of nature. Recreational- viewing organisms in a natural setting. Inspirational- to benefit the inner self Creative- aid to human creativity

Page 31: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Placing a Value on the Environment

Moral- the belief that various aspects of the environment have the right to exist and it is our obligation to allow them to continue.

Page 32: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

End of lecture day 1

Page 33: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

The nature of science

Science: A systematic process for learning about the world and

testing our understanding of it A dynamic process of observation, testing, and discovery The accumulated body of knowledge that results from

this process

Science is essential To sort fact from fiction Develop solutions to the problems we face

Page 34: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Applications of science

Restoration of forest ecosystems altered by human suppression of fire

Policy decisions and management practices

Energy-efficient methanol-powered fuel cell car from DaimlerChrysler

Technology

Page 35: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

The scientific method

A scientist makes an observation and asks questions of some phenomenon The scientist formulates a hypothesis, a statement that attempts to explain the scientific question. The hypothesis is used to generate predictions, which are specific statements that can be directly and unequivocally tested. The test results either support or reject the hypothesis

Page 36: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

The scientific process is part of a larger process

• The scientific process includes peer review, publication, and debate • A consistently supported hypothesis becomes a theory, a well-tested and widely accepted explanation• With enough data, a paradigm shift – a change in the dominant view – can occur

Page 37: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Types of Data

Data are recorded observations or items of information

Data fall into two categories Qualitative, or descriptions rather than measurements Quantitative, or recorded measurements, which are

sometimes organized into tables and graphs

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 38: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Induction in Discovery Science

Inductive reasoning draws conclusions through a limited set of observations

Repeat specific observations can lead to important generalizations For example, “the sun always rises in the east”

Deductive reasoning draws conclusions from initial definitions and assumptions by means of logical reasoning (transitive property of equality) Mr. Daly is a human Humans are mortal Mr. Daly is mortal

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 39: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

The Role of Hypotheses in Inquiry

A hypothesis is a tentative answer to a well-framed question (If-Then statement)

A scientific hypothesis leads to predictions that can be tested by observation or experimentation

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 40: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

A Closer Look at Hypotheses in Scientific Inquiry

A hypothesis must be testable and falsifiableHypothesis-based science often makes use of

two or more alternative hypothesesFailure to falsify a hypothesis does not prove

that hypothesis For example, you replace your flashlight bulb, and it

now works; this supports the hypothesis that your bulb was burnt out, but does not prove it (perhaps the first bulb was inserted incorrectly)

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 41: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Designing Controlled Experiments

A controlled experiment compares an experimental group (the artificial kingsnakes) with a control group (the artificial brown snakes)

Ideally, only the variable of interest (the color pattern of the artificial snakes) differs between the control and experimental groups

A controlled experiment means that control groups are used to cancel the effects of unwanted variables

A controlled experiment does not mean that all unwanted variables are kept constant

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 42: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Limitations of Science

In science, observations and experimental results must be repeatable

Science cannot support or falsify supernatural explanations, which are outside the bounds of science

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 43: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Theories in Science

In the context of science, a theory is: Broader in scope than a hypothesis General, and can lead to new testable hypotheses Supported by a large body of evidence in comparison

to a hypothesis

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 44: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Model Building in Science

Models are representations of natural phenomena and can take the form of: Diagrams Three-dimensional objects Computer programs Mathematical equations

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 45: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

The Culture of Science

Most scientists work in teams, which often include graduate and undergraduate students

Good communication is important in order to share results through seminars, publications, and websites

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 46: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Science, Technology, and Society

The goal of science is to understand natural phenomena

The goal of technology is to apply scientific knowledge for some specific purpose

Science and technology are interdependentBiology is marked by “discoveries,” while

technology is marked by “inventions”

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 47: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

The combination of science and technology has dramatic effects on society For example, the discovery of DNA by James Watson

and Francis Crick allowed for advances in DNA technology such as testing for hereditary diseases

Ethical issues can arise from new technology, but have as much to do with politics, economics, and cultural values as with science and technology

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 48: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Population & consumption

Human population growth exacerbates all environmental problems The growth rate has slowed, but we still add more than

200,000 people to the planet each day

Our consumption of resources has risen even faster than our population growth. Life has become more pleasant for us so far However, rising consumption amplifies the demands we

make on our environment.

Page 49: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment

• The most comprehensive scientific assessment of the condition of the world’s ecological systems

• Major findings:• Humans have drastically altered ecosystems • These changes have contributed to human well-

being and economic development, but at a cost• Environmental degradation could get much worse• Degradation can be reversed, but it requires work

Page 50: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Our energy choices will affect our future

• •The lives we live today are due to fossil fuels

• Machines • Chemicals • Transportation • Products

• Fossil fuels are a one-time bonanza; supplies will certainly decline

We have used up ½ of the world’s oil supplies; how will we handle this imminent fossil fuel shortage?

Page 51: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Sustainable solutions exist

We must develop solutions that protect both our quality of life and the environment

Organic agricultureTechnology

Reduces pollution

Biodiversity Protect species

Waste disposal Recycling

Alternative fuels

Page 52: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Are things getting better or worse?

• Many people think environmental conditions are better• Cornucopians: Human ingenuity will solve any

problem

• Some think things are much worse in the world• Cassandras: predict doom and disaster

• How can you decide who is correct?• Are the impacts limited to humans, or are other

organisms or systems involved?• Are the proponents thinking in the long or short term?• Are they considering all costs and benefits?

Page 53: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Sustainability: a goal for the future

How can humans live within the planet’s means? Humans cannot exist without functioning natural

systems

Sustainability Leaves future generations with a rich and full Earth Conserves the Earth’s natural resources Maintains fully functioning ecological systems

Sustainable development: the use of resources to satisfy current needs without compromising future availability of resources

Page 54: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

Conclusion

Environmental science helps us understand our relationship with the environment and informs our attempts to solve and prevent problems.

Identifying a problem is the first step in solving it

Solving environmental problems can move us towards health, longevity, peace and prosperity Environmental science can help us find balanced

solutions to environmental problems

Page 55: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

QUESTION: Review

Which of the following is correct about the term “environmentalism”?

a) It is very science-orientedb) It is a social movement to protect the environmentc) It usually does not include advocacy for the

environmentd) It involves scientists trying to solve environmental

problems

Page 56: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

QUESTION: Review

Adding various amounts of fertilizer to plants in a laboratory is a _____ type of experiment

a) Correlativeb) Naturalc) Manipulatived) Rare

Page 57: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

QUESTION: Review

What is the definition of “sustainable development”?

a) Using resources to benefit future generations, even if it means lower availability now

b) Letting future generations figure out their own problems

c) Using resources to satisfy current needs without compromising future availability

d) Letting each country decide what is its best interest

Page 58: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

QUESTION: Weighing the Issues

Which do you think is the best way to protect commonly owned resources (i.e., air, water, fisheries)?

a) Sell the resource to a private entityb) Voluntary organizations to enforce responsible usec) Governmental regulationsd) Do nothing and see what happens

Page 59: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

QUESTION: Weighing the Issues

Do you think the rest of the world can have an ecological footprint as large as the footprint of the United States?

a) Yes, because we will find new technologies and resources

b) Yes, because the footprint of the United States is not really that large

c) Definitely not; the world does not have that many resources

d) It does not matter; it’s not that important

Page 60: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

QUESTION: Interpreting Graphs and Data

According to this graph, what has happened to the population over the last 500 years?

a) It has grown exponentially

b) It has grown linearly

c) It has decreasedd) It has slowed

down recently

Page 61: PowerPoint ® Slides prepared by Jay Withgott and Heidi Marcum Ch 1 Part 1: Foundations of Environmental Science Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc.,

QUESTION: Interpreting Graphs and DataWhat happens if test results

reject a hypothesis?

a) The scientist formulates a new hypothesis

b) It shows the test failedc) The hypothesis was

supportedd) The predictions may not

have been correct