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Arrangement
(by Alphabetical order)

In a ¼ sheet of paper, write:


Offering #: Column #. Row #:
Name: Program:
ENVIRONMENTAL
what is
ENVIRONMENT?
ENVIRONMENT
from French environner

The physical, living and non-living,

SURROUNDING OF A SOCIETY

with which it has a reciprocal relationship


HOW IMPORTANT AND
WHY DO WE NEED TO
STUDY THE
ENVIRONMENT
FUNCTIONS
1ENVIRONMENT
of

.
Source of resource inputs
Source of amenity services

Provides life support


Receptacle for waste
FUNCTIONS
of
ENVIRONMENT
2.SERVICES
4 ECOSYSTEM

PROVISIONING CULTURAL REGULATING SUPPORTING


SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES
FOOD
PROVISIONING
More than 90% of the calories consumed by
people worldwide come from 80 plant species SERVICES
RAW MATERIALS
Ecosystems provide a great diversity of
materials including wood, biofuels, and fibers The
from wild or cultivated plant and animal species.
products
WATER directly
No water, no life. Ecosystems play a vital role in
providing the flow and storage of fresh water. obtained
from
MEDICINE
Natural ecosystems provide a variety of
ecosystems
plants and mushrooms which offer effective
cures for many kinds of health problems.
CULTURAL
RECREATION AND MENTAL AND
SERVICES PHYSICAL HEALTH
Nature-based opportunities for recreation play
an important role in maintaining mental and
physical health, e.g. walking and playing
Nonmaterial sports in parks and urban green spaces.
benefits people
obtain from
ecosystems TOURISM
Enjoyment of nature attracts millions of
travelers worldwide. This cultural ecosystem
service includes both benefits to visitors and
income opportunities for nature tourism
service providers.
CULTURAL
AESTHETIC APPRECIATION AND
SERVICE INSPIRATION FOR CULTURE, ART AND
S DESIGN
Animals, plants and ecosystems have been the
source of inspiration for much of our arts, culture,
Nonmaterial and design; they increasingly inspire science as
benefits well.

people obtain SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCE AND SENSE


from OF PLACE
Nature is a common element in most major
ecosystems religions. Natural heritage, spiritual sense of
belonging, traditional knowledge, and
associated customs are important for creating
a sense of belonging.
LOCAL CLIMATE AIR QUALITY REGULATIN
Ecosystems influence the local climate and air
quality.
G
SERVICES
CARBON SEQUESTRATION AND STORAGE
Ecosystems regulate the global climate by storing
greenhouse gases. The benefits
MODERATION OF EXTREME EVENTS obtained from
Ecosystems and living organisms create buffers
against natural disasters. They reduce damage the regulation
from floods, storms, tsunamis, avalanches, of ecosystem
landslides and droughts.
processes
WASTE WATER TREATMENT
Ecosystems such as wetlands filter effluents,
decompose waste through the biological activity of
microorganisms, and eliminate harmful pathogens.
EROSION PREVENTION AND
MAINTENANCE OF SOIL FERTILITY
Vegetation cover prevents soil erosion and ensures soil fertility
through natural biological processes such as nitrogen fixation
POLLINATION
Insects and wind pollinate plants and trees which is essential for the
development of fruits, vegetables and seeds.

BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
The activities of predators and parasites in ecosystems that act to
control populations of potential pest and disease vector.

REGULATION OF WATER FLOW


Water flow regulation is a key service provided by land cover
and configuration, but its dynamics are poorly understood by
most policy makers and land management organizations.
SUPPORTING HABITAT FOR SPECIES
SERVICES Ecosystems provide living spaces for plants
and animals; they also maintain a diversity of
complex processes that underpin the other
Indirect ecosystem services. Some habitats have an
exceptionally high number of species which
services, as makes them more genetically diverse than
they are others; these are known as ‘biodiversity
necessary for hotspots'

the production MAINTENANCE OF GENETIC


DIVERSITY
of provisioning,
Conserving and using genetic diversity can
regulating or provide the options needed for coping with
cultural stresses
services
⮚ Nuclear Energy
Natural resources that ⮚ Coal ⮚ Natural Gas
can be replenished in a ⮚ Petroleum
short period of time NONRENEWABLE

3.RESOURCES
RENEWABLE Natural resource that cannot
⮚ Solar be re-made or re-grown at a
⮚ Wind ⮚ Geothermal scale comparable to its
consumption
⮚ Water ⮚ Biomass
SEVEN
ENVIRONMENTAL
PRINCIPLES
1. 2. 3. 4.

Nature Everything
All forms of is connected Everything
knows life are to changes
best
important everything
else

2. 3. 4.
5. 6. 7.

Everything Ours is a Nature is


beautiful
must go finite and that
somewhere Earth humans are
the stewards
of God
what is
ENVIRONMENTAL

SCIENCE
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
defined

The use of scientific approaches


TO UNDERSTAND THE COMPLEX SYSTEMS

in which we live.
integrative
global

ABOUT
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE

MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Politics Ethics

Economics Demography

integrativ
timeline
global

Philosophy Anthropology
is
Geography
Biology

Geology
Chemistry

Ecology Physics
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
informative

integrativ
global
is
GLOBAL
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE

informative

integrative
global
helps us understand our
remarkable
planet
ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCE
versus
ENVIRONMENTALISM
MAIN GOALS
ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCE
THREE MAIN GOALS

Learn how Understand Determine how


the natural how humans we affect the
world works interact with environment
the
environment
ENVIRONMENTALISM defined

Concerned about and action aimed at

PROTECTING ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENTALISM
A social movement or an ideology
focused on the welfare of the
environment, environmentalism
seeks to protect and conserve the
elements of earth's ecosystem.
ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCE
IS NOT THE SAME AS
ENVIRONMENTALISM
WHERE DO
IDEAS FROM
OUR
THE
ENVIRONMENT
COME FROM?
ENVIRONMENTA
PROTECTION
L
HAS HISTORIC
ROOTS
Some of the earliest recorded
scientific studies of environmental
damage were carried out French
or British colonial administrators.

4th CENTURY B.C.

18th CENTURY
During this period, the connections
Plato had noticed the between deforestation, soil
adverse effects of erosion, and local climate change
deforestation. were already observed and
understood.
Poivre was appalled at the environmental and social
devastation caused by destruction of wildlife (such as
the flightless dodo) and the felling of ebony forests on
the island by early European settlers.

1764

1769
During this year, Stephen Hale’s idea of Pierre Poivre, an early French governor
conserving green plants preserves rainfall of Mauritius ordered that one-quarter of
were put into practice on the Caribbean island, Mauritius be preserved in forests,
where about 20 percent of the land was particularly on steep mountain slopes
marked as “reserved in wood for rains.” and along waterways.
4 STAGES BEFORE
GLOBAL
environmentalism
1. RESOURCE WASTE TRIGGERED
PRAGMATIC RESOURCE CONSERVATION
01  America’s first environmentalist
 Man and Nature, warned people about
their destructive ways in nature
 He suggest that human beings were
GEORGE PERKINS
agents of change, or “disturbing agents.”
MARSH  Largely because of his book, national
AUTHOR, MAN AND NATURE forest reserves were established in the
(1864)
United States in 1873 to protect dwindling
timber supplies and endangered
watersheds.
1. RESOURCE WASTE TRIGGERED
PRAGMATIC RESOURCE CONSERVATION
01 02

GEORGE PERKINS
THEODORE
MARSH
ROOSEVELT
AUTHOR, MAN AND NATURE
(1864) PRESIDENT, USA |
1901-1909
1. RESOURCE WASTE TRIGGERED
PRAGMATIC RESOURCE CONSERVATION
02  Nature existed to benefit mankind
 timber/trees could be harvested, sport could
be had, water could be taken to irrigate
farmland
 Roosevelt established the federal
Reclamation Service in 1902.
THEODORE
ROOSEVELT  through the use of dams and irrigation,
PRESIDENT, USA | created arable land in areas that had been
1901-1909 too dry to farm.
 Reclamation Service brought millions of
acres of farmland into service.
1. RESOURCE WASTE TRIGGERED
PRAGMATIC RESOURCE CONSERVATION
01 02 03

GEORGE PERKINS THEODORE GIFFORD


AUTHOR, MARSH
MAN AND NATURE ROOSEVELT
PRESIDENT, USA | 1901-1909 PINCHOT
CHIEF, FOREST
SERVICE

The basis of Roosevelt’s and Pinchot’s


policies was pragmatic utilitarian
1. RESOURCE WASTE TRIGGERED
PRAGMATIC RESOURCE CONSERVATION
 First chief of US Forest Service
03
 tripled the nation’s forest reserves
 more interested in the practical elements
of conservation
 Protecting the parks as a “social good”
GIFFORD and national forests had value because
PINCHOT of the resources they provided to citizens
CHIEF, FOREST
SERVICE
1. RESOURCE WASTE TRIGGERED
PRAGMATIC RESOURCE CONSERVATION
01 02 03

GEORGE PERKINS THEODORE GIFFORD


AUTHOR, MARSH
MAN AND NATURE ROOSEVELT
PRESIDENT, USA | 1901-1909 PINCHOT
CHIEF, FOREST
SERVICE

The basis of Roosevelt’s and Pinchot’s


policies was pragmatic utilitarian
2. ETHICAL AND AESTHETIC CONCERNS
INSPIRED PRESERVATION MOVEMENT
01 02

JOHN MUIR ALDO LEOPOLD


GEOLOGIST | AUTHOR WILDLIFE ECOLOGIST

“We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity


belonging to us. When we see land as a community to
which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and
3. RISING POLLUTION LEVELS LED TO THE
MODERN ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT
01 02

RACHEL CARSON DAVID BROWER


AUTHOR, SILENT SPRING ENVIRONMENTAL ACTIVIST
4. ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY IS
TIED TO SOCIAL PROGRESS
01 02

BARRY COMMONER WANGARI MAATHAI


MOLECULAR BIOLOGIST FOUNDER, GREEN BELT
MOVEMENT
WHAT PERSISTENT
CHALLENGES
DO WE FACE?
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL
ISSUES
Environmental Quality
• Climate change - concentrations of CO2 in the
atmosphere have increased nearly 50 percent.

Climate models indicate that by 2100, if current


trends continue, global mean temperatures will
probably increase by 2° to 6°C compared to 1990
temperatures.
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
Environmental Quality
• Clean Water - At least 1.1 billion people lack access to safe
drinking water, and twice that many don’t have adequate
sanitation.
• Polluted water contributes to the death of more than 15
million people every year, most of them children under age 5
• About 40 percent of the world population lives in countries
where water demands now exceed supplies, and;
• the United Nations projects that by 2025 as many as three-
fourths of us could live under similar conditions.
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
Environmental Quality
• Air Quality
- the United Nations estimates,
more than 2 billion metric tons
of air pollutants (not including
carbon dioxide or windblown
soil) are released each year.
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
Human population and well-being
• Population growth, Hunger and Food
There are well over 7 billion people on
earth, about twice as many as there were
40 years ago.
Soil scientists report that about two-thirds
of all agricultural lands show signs of
degradation
Currently more than 850 million people
are chronically undernourished, and at
least 60 million people face acute food
shortages due to weather, politics, or war.
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
Natural Resources
• Biodiversity Loss
800 species have disappeared and at least 10,000
species are now considered threatened.
In 2004, most bird and butterfly populations had
declined by 50 to 75 percent over the previous 20
years.
At least half of the forests existing before the
introduction of agriculture have been cleared.
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
Natural Resources
• Marine Resources
According to the World Resources Institute, more
than three-quarters of the 441 fish stocks for which
information is available and are severely depleted.
Some marine biologists estimate that 90 percent
of all the large predators, including blue fin tuna,
marlin, swordfish, sharks, cod, and halibut, have
been removed from the ocean.
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
Natural Resources
• Energy Resources
The costs of extracting and burning these
fuels are among our most serious
environmental challenges.
Costs include air and water pollution,
mining damage, and violent conflicts,
in addition to climate change.
Someone will
pick it up
Someone will
pick it up

Freedom in a
commons brings

RUIN TO ALL.

GARRETT HARDIN
Someone will pick it up

T R AGEDY OF THE
COMMONS
TRAGEDY OF
THE
COMMONS
SUSTAINABILITY
• Environmental Sustainability- living within the
means of our natural resource.

• Economic Sustainability- requires a business or


a country to use its resources efficiently.

• Social Sustainability- ability of society to


persistently achieve good social well-being.
THROUGHOUT

We should know the


amount of resources we
use and dispose of.

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