Biome | Annual Rainfall, Soil Type | Major Vegetation | World Location |
Deciduous forest | 70-25 cm; rich soil with high organic content | Hardwood trees | N America, Europe, AUS, E Asia |
Tropical rainforest | 200-400 cm; poor quality soil | Tall trees with lower limbs, vines, epiphytes, plants adapted to low light intensity | S America, W AFR, SE Asia |
Grasslands | 10-60 cm; rich soil | Sod-forming grasses | N American plains and prairies; RUS steppes; S AFR vels; Argentinean pampas |
Coniferous forest | 20-60 cm; mostly in summer; soil is acidic due to vegetation | Coniferous trees | Northern N America; N Eurasia |
Tundra | Less than 25 cm; soil is permafrost | Herbaceous plants | Northern latitudes of N America, Europe, and RUS |
Chaparral | 50-75 cm; mostly in winter; soil is shallow and infertile | Small trees with large hard leaves, spiny shrubs | W N America; Mediterranean regions |
Deserts | Less than 25 cm; soil has a coarse texture (ex. sandy) | Cactus, other low-water adapted plants | 30° north and south of equator |
Activity | Explanation | Solution |
Clearing land for construction, homes, roads | • Reduces habitat for many species • Results in habitat fragmentation | • Cluster development • Smart growth planning • Develop urban boundaries • Habitat conservation areas |
Logging, clear cutting, deforestation | • Reduces habitat for many species • Results in habitat fragmentation | • Replant trees • Selective cutting |
Agriculture • Monoculture/GMOs • Clearing forests to create pastureland • Pesticide use | • Eliminates native species; decreases genetic variation • Reduces habitat for many species • Eliminates native species and beneficial organisms | • Encourage polyculture, agroforestry, intercropping • Require GMO crops to be sterile • Create wildlife, habitat corridors • Grow shade-tolerant crops • Implement IPM techniques, biological pest controls |
Overfishing, hunting, overhunting, poaching | • Reduces keystone species • Reduces top predators • Depletes endangered species | • Regulate activities • Establish quotas • Enforce existing laws (ESA) • Ban trade (CITES) |
Water contamination by • Excess fertilizer • Runoff from feedlots • Runoff from construction • Untreated sewage | • Overloads sediments and nutrients • Decreases dissolved O2 (only certain species can survive) | • Regulate non-point sources of water pollution (ex. Buffer zones, swales, containment ponds, stormwater treatment areas) • Secondary or tertiary treatment |
Burning of fossil fuels | • Climate change: death of coral reefs, loss of reef habitat, increases sea level with resulting loss of coastal habitat • Acid rain: increases acidity of freshwater systems (only certain species can survive) | • Climate change: implement the kyoto protocol, carbon sequestration, carbon cap and trade, carbon tax, switch to renewable energy sources • Acid rain: require scrubbers on coal burning power plants, switch to renewable energy sources |
Introduction of invasive species | • displaces native species | • Checkpoints for agricultural inspections • Tighter enforcement on import of horticultural or exotic species • Edu regarding strategies to prevent invasives |
Dams/hydroelectric plants | • Fragments habitat | • Steps to allow fish migration |
Surface mining | • Destroys habitat | • Enforce surface mining and reclamation act |
Date | Law | What It Did |
1972 | Marine mammal Protection Act | Protected marine mammals from falling below their optimum sustainable pop levels |
1973 | Endangered Species Act Program for the protection of threatened plants and animals and their habitats | Prohibited the commerce of those species considered to be endangered or threatened |
1973 | Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES) | Bans capture, exportation, sale of endangered and threatened species |
Factor | Incr Life Expectancy |
Incr access to HC | Fewer deaths from treatable diseases; prevention of early death by vaccines |
Improve food qual/quantity | Better health resulting in less malnut or fewer early deaths; decr in food borne diseases |
Incr access to clean water | Fewer water-borne and communicable diseases |
Fewer pregnancies | Fewer children = fewer maternal deaths |
Incr health-related edu | Better sanitation, less diseases transmission |
Factor | Decr Fertility Rate |
Incr female edu | Fewer children; later age at first reproduction; aware of choices for fam planning |
Econ opp for women | Fewer children; later age at first reproduction; less dependence on males |
Later marriage age for women | Fewer children; later age at first reproduction |
Incr access to fam planning | Fewer children; confidence that children will survive to adulthood |
Incr gender eq | Access to fam planning; financially less dependent on males; choice in reproduction |
Incr econ dev | Children no long asset → financial liability |
Social programs for elderly | Children no longer need to support old parents |
Soil conservation
Change in Water Quality | Deforestation Efx |
Incr in water temp | Loss of shade; incr solar radiation reaching the stream |
Incr in sediment/turbidity | Loss of root struc, leaf litter, canopy leads to incr soil erosion and runoff |
Incr in nutrient concentration | Loss of vegetation results in less nutrient uptake and subsequent runoff into stream |
Decr in pH | Loss of root struc allows naturally occurring acids to run off into streams |
Decr in dissolved oxygen | Loss of shade lads to warmer water, holds less dissolved oxygen |
Date | Name of Law | What it Does |
1964 | Wilderness Act | Est a review of road-free areas of 5k+ acres and island within the national wildlife refuges or the national park system for inclusioni the national preservation system (restricted activities there) |
1968 | Wild and Scenic Rivers Act | Est a national wild and scenic rivers sys for the protection of rivers with important scenic, recreational, fish and wildlife, and other values |
Date | Name of Legislation | What it Did |
1965 | Anadromous fish conservation act | Protected fish that live in the sea but grow up and breed in freshwater |
1976 | Magnuson fishery conservation and management act | Governed the conservation and management of ocean fishing |
1972 | Marine mammal protection act | Conserve marine mammals |
1972 | Endangered species | Provided broad protection for species of fish, wildlife, and plants that are listed as threatened or endangered in the US or elsewhere |
1982 | UN agreement for implementation of the provisions of UNCLOS | Set out the principles for the conservation and management of certain types of fish |
1975 | CITES (convention on int’l trade in endangered species of wild fauna and flora) | An int’l agreement b/t governments that ensured that int’l trade in specimens of wild organisms don’t threaten survival |
Date | Name of Legislation | Purpose |
1872 | Mining Act | Governed prospecting and mining of minerals on publicly owned land |
1920 | Mineral Leasing Act | Permitted the Bureau of Land Management to grant leases for dev of coal, phosphate, potahs, sodium, sulphur, and other leasable mineral deposits on public domain lands |
1980 | Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (Superfund) | Reg damage done by mining |
1976 | Resource Conservation and Recovery Acts (RCRA) | Reg some mineral processing wastes |
1977 | Surface Mining Control And Reclamation Act | Est a program for reg surface coal mining and reclamation activities; est mandatory standards for these activities on state and fed lands, incl a req that adverse MPX on fish, wildlife, and related env values be minimized |
Overview
General notes
Laws of thermodynamics
Resources
Fossil fuels
General notes
Oil
Coal
Natural gas
Nuke energy
General notes
Types of reactors
Safety issues
Safety Issue | Description |
Meltdown | Reactor loses coolant water → hot core melts through the containment building → radioactive materials could then get into groundwater |
Explosion | Gases generated by a uncontrolled core burst containment vessel and spread radioactive materials in the environment |
Nuke weapons | Some by-products of fission reaction can be remade into fission “dirty” bombs- spread damaging radioactive isotopes |
Highly radioactive waste | No longer usable cores, piping, and spent fuel rods need to be stored for may centuries → “spent” fuel have radioactive elements like plutonium-239 (half-life: 2.13 * 106 years) |
Thermal pollution | Water used to cool turbines is returned to local bodies of water at a much higher temp than when it was removed |
Radioactive elements | Gamma rays produced by radioactive decay can damage cells and DNA → breast, thyroid, stomach, leukemia cancer (harms immune system) |
Concern for one’s safety | Suffer mental stress, anxiety, depression caused by concerns for their safety → Not In My Backyard Syndrome (NIMBY) |
Renewable energy
Biomass
Hydroelectric energy
Solar energy
Wind energy
Geothermal energy
Ocean tides
Hydrogen cells
Energy conservation
Env policy
Major acts
Date | Legislation | Purpose |
1970 | National Env Policy Act | Created council on env quality which resulted in the creation of the EPA; fed agencies must prep env MPX statements |
1983 | Int’l Env Protection Act | Authorized POTUS to assist countries in protecting and maintaining wildlife habitats and dev wildlife management and plant conservation programs; est sanctuaries, reserves, parks, anti-poaching measures |
1990 | Pollution Prevention Act | Promote source reduction of pollution |
1990 | Env Edu Act | Est Office of Env Edu within the EPA to dev and administer a fed env edu program |
Green taxes
Int’l agreements
Date | Agreement | Purpose |
1978 | Montreal Accord | Cut emissions of CFCs that damage ozone layer |
1992 | Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes | Protect human health and env against adverse efx resulting from generation, management, transboundary movements and disposal of hazardous and other wastes (US has not ratified) |
1997 | Kyoto Protocol | Members must cut their GHG emissions back to 5% below 1990 levels (US has not ratified) |
attach to the surface of plants, soil and water
●Global Warming ○Greenhouse Gas Concentration
Greenhouse Gas | Pre-Industrial Level | In 2016 | |||||
Carbon Dioxide, CO2 | 280 ppm | 400 ppm | |||||
Methane, CH4 | 715 ppb | 1,840 ppb | |||||
Nitrous Oxides, N2O | 270 ppb | 328 ppb | |||||
● Effects of Climate Change: What’s Coming? ○Physical Changes ● Decrease of glaciers and ice sheets
● Continued rising of average ocean levels ● Changes in precipitation ● Increase in frequency and duration of storms ● Increase in number of hot days ● Decrease in number of cold days
○Changes in Biota ● Increased crop yields in cold environments
● Loss of croplands due to drought and higher temperatures ● Cold-tolerant species will need to migrate to cooler climates ● Heat-tolerant species may spread and invade new habitats ● Additional deaths from water and insect-borne diseases ● Commerce, transport, and coastal settlements may be disrupted by changes in ocean levels and storms ● Change in marine ecosystems and fishery productivity
○ Adaptations to the Warmer Climate ● Must occur at many levels of society
●Develop new technology ● Continue to reduce emissions from engines ● Legislative and behavioral changes needed ●Promote sustainable growth
●Reducing Climate Change ○Technological ●Carbon sequestration
● Reduction of emissions from engines
○Behavioral ● Turning off the lights to conserve electricity ○Policy ● Enacting new treaties and legislation