You are on page 1of 2

Essay on analyzing humanity’s behavior towards the Ecosystem and public health in a

rainy season
Thirty years from now, the world that we live in will become radically different in more
ways than one. However, the state of our world tomorrow is predicated on the choices
we make today. Over the past five decades, some imprudent human activities – most
prominently, the burning of fossil fuels – have led to a massive spike in emissions of
CO2 and other greenhouse gases that accelerate the process of worldwide warming by
trapping heat within the lower atmosphere. Moreover, ocean levels per area unit are
rising, glaciers per area unit are steadily melting, while extreme weather events are a not
only a lot more frequent, but also increasingly severe.
Against this backdrop, the health impact of temperature change. As a case in point, an
increase in the variety of mosquitoes per area unit vectors for breakbone fever and
protozoa infection could snowball into a massive health challenge that beleaguers
developed and developing nations alike.
In fact, scientific evidence clearly underscores the widespread negative impacts of
temperature change on both living creatures and the world at large. According to the
World Health Organization (WHO), temperature change was responsible for claiming as
many as 140,000 lives in 2004. By conservative estimates, it is suggested that
temperature changes can cause around 250 000 more deaths every year before half this
century is over. Unsurprisingly, the poorest and most marginalized populations in low-
income countries, especially young individuals and older folks, are the most vulnerable.
However, the disastrous consequences of human insensitivity are far more widespread.
Human impact on the surroundings or anthropogenic impact on the surroundings
includes changes to biophysical environments and ecosystems, diverseness, and natural
resources caused directly or indirectly by humans, together with heating, environmental
degradation (such as ocean natural process, ocean deterioration, mass extinction and
diverseness loss, ecological crisis, and ecological collapse.

For instance, habitat destruction caused by human activities have seriously jeopardized
resident species and ecosystems. Deforestation and altered geologic processes are two
examples of surrounding destruction. Firstly, deforestation, which refers to the process
of removing forest or trees and preparing the land for non-forest use, leads to a radical
loss of biodiversity by drastically changing the scheme. Notably, deforestation may be
also be a result of timber harvest/of clearing the land for agricultural, commercial, or
residential use. Secondly, the loss of biodiversity alters the scheme and potentially
causes aridity and erosion. In addition to causing temperature change and extinction, it
may even lead to a geologic process, if the loss occurs on a big enough scale. These social
impacts will inexorably catalyze the displacement of endemic peoples.

You might also like