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Human Impact. Human Impact. As the human population grows, more and more strain and changes are imposed on our environment. As we have learned our world and the ecosystems within it require balance and are fragile to abrupt changes.
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Human Impact • As the human population grows, more and more strain and changes are imposed on our environment. • As we have learned our world and the ecosystems within it require balance and are fragile to abrupt changes. • In order to prevent irreversible changes we have to understand the causes of environmental change and the effects these changes will have on future generations.
Causes - Agriculture • Fishing – Overfishing and pollution contribute to changes in aquatic ecosystems. • Crop production – Pesticides and Herbicides alter the carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus cycles. • Meat production – Land degradation (deforestation), Methane production (green house gases), and disease. • Introduction of invasive species as a way of dealing with pests.
Causes - Energy • Fossil fuels directly pollute the environment and contribute to global warming. • Nuclear plants pollute water with radioactive waste. • Damns destroy habitat and ecosystems. • Wind turbines kills animals.
Causes - Manufacturing • Household chemicals damage aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. • Technological waste is poisonous and some components cannot be recycled. • Paper production produces green house gases.
Causes - Manufacturing • Pharmaceuticals and beauty products damage aquatic ecosystems and may cause direct consequences to users (see DDT video). • Paint additives are poisonous to people and the environment
Causes - Mining • Erosion • Sinkholes • Loss of wildlife • Contamination of soil and water • Logging
Causes - Transportation • The use of oil based fuels causes green house gases (Carbon dioxide) and global warming. • Acid rain (change in pH of water) and smog. • Increase in population = increase in transportation needs.
Causes - War • Biochemical weapons pollute and kill. • Wildlife and habitat destruction. • Nuclear waste and disposal.
Effects – Habitat Destruction • Animal homes are destroyed. • Animals must search for new homes. • If an animal must change biomes it probably will not adapt and die. • Food webs are changed and some animals cannot cope with the change.
Effects – Coral Reefs • Coral reefs = fish habitat. • 70% of coral reefs are either destroyed or endangered (nearly destroyed). • Marine ecosystems cannot survive without coral reefs.
Effects - Extinction • Damaging the environment and habitat leads to loss of wildlife and biodiversity (a decrease in variety of wildlife). • Extinction (complete loss) of species occur. • Changes in food webs that sometimes lead to further extinction of other species or imbalances in nature.