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Properties of Water. Cohesion Adhesion Polarity Universal Solvent High Heat Capacity Density. The Importance of Water. Aquifers. Water Supply. Supply Fresh Water 3% fresh 2% Glacial 1% Ground & Surface. Water Management – Dams & Reservoirs. Pros – Ensure year-round water supply
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Properties of Water Cohesion Adhesion Polarity Universal Solvent High Heat Capacity Density
The Importance of Water • Aquifers
Water Supply • Supply Fresh Water • 3% fresh • 2% Glacial • 1% Ground & Surface
Water Management – Dams & Reservoirs • Pros – • Ensure year-round water supply • Hydropower • Recreation • Fisheries • Industry • Controls flooding
Water Management • Cons – • Alter ecosystems Increase water loss • Sediment Deposition Controls flooding • Block spawning fish Submerges whitewater • Flood Land
Water Issues • Too Much • Too Little • Distribution • National and State Boarders • Salinization • Desalinization • Disease • Point Vs Nonpoint • E-coli • Dead Zones • Eutriphication • Water Diversion • Combined Sewer Overflows • Waste Water Treatment
Soil Issues • Erosion • Desertification • Mineral Depletion • Top Soil Loss
What is Soil? • Composed of: • mineral matter - 45% • organic matter - 5% • Water - 25% • Air - 25% • Modified by: • weather • water • organisms
Humus Humus? • Partially decomposed material • Acts as a sponge • Holds Nutrients • Leaching
Horizons The deposition of colloids, soluble salts, and suspended mineral particles in a lower soil horizon through the process of eluviation (downward movement) from an upper soil horizon.
Horizons 1. O Horizon – layer of decomposing organic matter - leaf litter called humus – this is not considered soil yet • 2. A Horizon – Topsoil – rich in organic matter - leaching • 3. E Horizon – This “illuviation” (The deposition of soluble salts and suspended mineral particles in a lower soil horizon through the process of eluviation {downward movement] from an upper soil horizon.)layer is light in color & it is made up mostly of sand and silt, having lost most of its minerals and clay as water drips through the soil. Found in older soils • 4. B Horizon - Contains clay and mineral deposits from layers above it when mineralized water drips down it collects here. • 5. C Horizon - Consists of slightly broken-up bedrock - no plants roots • 6. R Horizon - The unweathered rock (bedrock)
Soil Properties • Availability of nutrient minerals in clay Positives and Negatives of clay?
Major Soil Types • Major Soil Groups - SAMAO - 17K - identified soil types Leaf Litter - Deep Humus Acidic - Leached
Major Soil Types Limited Humus - few layers Deep Soils - rich in humus
Major Soil Types • Major Soil Groups
Tragedy of Commons • Sustainability and the Tragedy of the Commons Garrett Hardin In England and Wales, a common (or common land) is a piece of land over which other people—often neighboring landowners—could exercise one of a number of traditional rights, such as allowing their cattle to graze upon it.
Hectares of Land Required One U.S. Child has a 1:12 Ratio of consumption • Ecological footprint
New Model IPAT • How to move T to the denominator • Emulate Nature • Linear becomes cyclical • Resource extraction Vs renewable • Ray C. Anderson I = P x A x T1 I = P x A T2
General Revisions Act The General Revision Act of 1891 authorizes the President, under the Forest Reserve Act, to create forest preserves "wholly or in part covered with timber or undergrowth, whether of commercial value or not....” and prevent them from being acquired through the various public land laws.
Antiquities Act 1906 The Antiquities Act of 1906 resulted from concerns about protecting mostly prehistoric Indian ruins and artifacts-collectively termed "antiquities ” Authorized presidents to proclaim historic landmarks as national monuments Use of the Antiquities Act http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/hisnps/NPSHistory/antiq.htm
Gifford Pinchot • Appointed by Theodore Roosevelt • 1st Chief of the Forest Service, 1905-1910 • Forest service motto "greatest good for the greatest number.” • Department of the Interior to the Department of Agriculture.
Dominated by the frontier attitude Manifest Destiny 1800 1700 1900 1600 What is a frontier attitude? What is manifest destiny?
Endangered Species Act (1973) • * Authorizes listing of species as endangered and threatened • * Prohibits unauthorized taking, possession, sale, and transport of endangered species • * Provides authority to acquire land for the conservation of the listed species • * Establishes a recovery plan
Economy Products Source Sinks Raw Materials Waste Production Consumption Money Economics and the Environment How does our economic system compare to natural systems ? Why compare them?
Full Cost Accounting What are internal and external costs? Making the aluminum can: http://www.cancentral.com/canc/text/history.htm
Economics and the Environment First graph - harm caused by pollution exceeds cost of reducing it - so it makes sense to control the pollution Second Graph - Cost of reducing pollution exceeds the harm of the pollution - so it makes sense to pollute Green line = cost $$$ Brown line = harm done • Cost-Benefit Analysis
Subsidy A payment, generally by the government, to the producer or consumer of a good or service, intended to encourage its production and/or to reduce its cost to consumers.
Earth’s Major Biomes • Type of biome controlled by temperature and precipitation
Not always present; anaerobic, dominated by decomposers - below light penetration Aquatic Ecosystems • Freshwater Ecosystems • Lakes and Ponds
Thermocline - lakes • Freshwater Ecosystems • Thermal stratification in temperate lakes Point of change between warm surface & cold depths
Turnover - Lakes • Turnover in • temperate lakes Spring Turnover - Melting Ice (40C) & warming surface waters + wind Fall Turnover - cooling surface water = > density(40C) + wind Littoral-Limnetic-Profundal Zones
Spheres of Organization • Landscape Ecology – • encompasses larger area and several ecosystems • Biosphere – • the whole earth
Types of Energy Chemical - energy stored in bonds Radiant - wave energy: electromagnetic Thermal - energy flow from high heat to low Mechanical - the energy of motion Nuclear - atomic nuclei Electrical - flow of charged particles
The Energy of Life • 1st Law of Thermodynamics – • energy can change forms, but is not created or destroyed • 2nd Law of Thermodynamics – • “Entropy Rules!” amount of usable energy decreases as energy changes forms • 1st Law deals with quantity of energy • 2nd Law with quality of energy
C6H12O6 + 6 H2O + 6 O2 The Energy of Life • Photosynthesis 6 CO2 + 12 H2O + radiant energy
6 CO2 + 12 H2O + energy The Energy of Life • Cellular Respiration C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6 H2O
Chemosynthesis An extremophile is any microbe that thrives in extreme conditions of temperature, pressure, salinity, or concentrations of hostile chemicals. Extremophiles commonly belong to the kingdom Archaebacteria. Hydrogen sulfide chemosynthesis 6{CO2}+6{H2O}+3{H2S} → C6H12O6+3{H2SO4}
The Path of Energy Flow • Food Chains –
Pyramid of Biomass Pyramid of Numbers The Path of Energy Flow • Ecological Pyramids
The Path of Energy Flow • Ecological Pyramids Pyramid of Energy
Gross Primary Productivity Plant cellular respiration Net Primary Productivity = The Path of Energy Flow • Ecosystem Productivity
With mycorrhizae Without mycorrhizae Interactions Among Organisms Hippo Spa - You Tube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SJq2bnb1VA • Symbiosis – • Three types 1) Mutualism
Epiphytes Interactions Among Organisms The Alien & the Blind Man - you tube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vb_UeDVW4pI • Symbiosis – • Three types 2) Commensalism
Tracheal mites Interactions Among Organisms Video of wasp & caterpillar http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMG-LWyNcAs • Symbiosis – • Three types 3) Parasitism
The Ecological Niche • Resource partitioning • Intraspecific competition • Interspecific competition • Fundamental vs. Realized Niche
The Ecological Niche • Limiting Resources Bald Cypress on campus - knees no knees