Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Unit 3- Humans and Their Environment
- Human Impact on the
Environment
- Population increase
due too modern
medicine and farming
methods
- Reduced number
of people dying
from hunger and
disease
- Graph shows the
quick rise in
population
- Bigger effect on the
environment we live in
- Increasing Demands on the
Environment
- 1) Pressure on
Environment;
resources we need
to survive on
- 2) Demands for a
higher standard of
living e.g. luxuries like
cars and computers
- So we use raw materials
(e.g. oil to make plastics)
but this means more
energy is used for
manufacturing processes
- More resources are being
taken from the environment,
more quickly
- 3) Raw materials used up
quicker than being replaced.
One day we're going to run
out
- Producing More Waste
- Water
- Sewage and Toxic
Chemicals pollute
lakes, rivers and
oceans
- Affecting plants and
animals
- Wash away fetilisers
- Land
- Toxic chemical
used for farming
- Bury nuclear
waste
underground
- Lots of household
waste in landfills
- Air
- Smoke and gas in
atmosphere pollute air
e.g. sulfur dioxide --->
acid rain
- More People means
Less Land for Plants
and Animals
- Four main human activities:
- 1) Building
- 2) Farming
- 3) Dumping Waste
- 4) Quarring for metal
ores
- Carbon Dioxide and the
Greenhouse Effect
Anmerkungen:
- Carbon dioxide is
removed from the air
and stored in various
places
- 1) Carbon
Dioxide present in
atmosphere
- 2) Many
processes lead
to CO2 being
released
- 3) Too much CO2 leads to
global warming
- 4) CO2 can be
sequestered (locked up)
in natural stores like:
- Oceans,
Lakes and
ponds
- Green plants;
Photosynthesis
- Peat Bogs
- Carbon Dioxide and
Methane Trap Heart from
the Sun
- 1) Temperature of Earth is balanced
between heat it gets from Sun and
heat it radiates back out into space
- 2) Gases in atmosphere act like an
insulating layer. They absorb most of the
heat that would radiate back into space and
re-radiate it in all directions; back towards
the Earth
- 3) If it didn't happen we
would have no natural
heat at night
- 4) The main Greenhouse
gases are Carbon Dioxide
and Methane; levels are
rising sharply
- 5) Earth is heating up
due to this rise.
Global warming is a
type of climate change
- Deforestation and Destruction of Peat Bogs
- Deforestation means Chopping Down Trees
- This causes large scale
problems such as cutting
down rainforests. It's done
for various reasons:
- 1) Provide timber to use
as building material
- 2) Clear more land for
farming so it can provide
more food or be used for
crops
- 3) To produce paper for wood
- Deforestation leads to 4 main problems:
- 1) More methane in atmosphere
- Rice is grown in warm,
waterlogged conditions,
ideal for decomposers.
These organisms
produce methane
- Cattle produce methane
- 2) More carbon dioxide in atmosphere
- Released when trees are burnt
- Microorganisms feeding on
dead wood release CO2
through respiration
- 3) Less carbon dioxide taken in
- Cutting down lots of trees
means that the amount of
CO2 removed from the
atmosphere during
photosynthesis is reduced
- 4) Less Biodiversisty
- Variety of different species in a
habitat- more species, greater
biodiversity
- Species become extinct
from loss of habitat
- Lost opportunities: unknown
products due to organisms being
extinct, newly discovered plants
and animals are a source of food,
new fibres for clothing and new
medicines
- Destroying Peat Bogs Adds More CO2 to the
Atmosphere
- 1) acidic, waterlogged land. Plant
can't fully decay due to lack of
oxygen. This builds up to form a peat.
- 2) Carbon in plants is stored in the peat
- 3) Drained so
area can be used
for farmland or cut
up to be used as
fuel. Also compost
- 4) Peat decomposes when
drained so CO2 is released.
Adds to greenhouse effect
- 5) People can buy
peat-free compost to
reduce the demand
- Climate Change
- The consequences of
Global Warming
- 1) Seas gets warmer, it
expands, causing sea
levels to rise. People
living in low-lying places
will be flooded
- 2) Higher
temperatures
means ice
melts, causing
sea level to rise
- 3) Changed
weather patterns;
more extreme
weather. Hurricanes
form over water
warmer than 27oC
- 4) Distribution on species may
change. Conditions change, so
they move to thrive in conditions
that are best for them
- 5) Biodiversity reduce; extinction
- 6) Changes in migration patterns
- Weight the Evidence Before
Making Judgements
- 1) Scientist collect data
- 2) Satellites monitor
snow and ice cover,
temperature of sea
surface. Detect changes
- 3) Only useful if
it covers a wide
area and long
time scale
- 4) Mistakes happen
- Biofuels
- Fuels made by Fermentation
- 1) Waste products
can be used
- 2) Bacteria or yeast
break sugars by
anaerobic
respiration
- Ethanol
- 1) Yeast make ethanol
when they break down
glucose by anaerobic
respiration
- Glucose --> Ethanol +
Carbon Dioxide + Energy
- 2) Sugar canes
juices or glucose
derived from maize
starch by the action
of carbohydrase
- 3) Ethanol distilled to
separate the yeast from
remaining glucose
- 4) Cars can run on Bioethanol
and petrol; gasohol
- Biogas made by Anaerobic
Fementation of Waste Material
- 1) 70% methane, 30% carbon dioxide
- 2) Microorganism ferment plant
and animal waste, contains
carbohydrates. Sludge waste is
used to make biogas
- 3) Made by fermenter called a
digester or generator
- 4) Generators kept at
constant temperature to
keep microorganisms
respiring
- 5) Batch generators and
continuous generators
- 6) Biogas can't be stored
as a liquid so is used
straight away for heating,
cooking, lighting or to
power a turbine
- Fuel Production; Large and Small Scale
- Large Scale generators are
being set up in countries. Small
generators are used to power
villages
- Human waste, waste from pigs
and food waste can be
digested by bacteria to
produce biogas
- By-products are used to fertilise
crops and gardens
- Using Biogas Generation
- Not all Biogas Generators are the same
- Batch Generators make biogas in
small batches. Manually loaded with
waste which is left to digest and the
by-products are cleared away at the
end of each session
- Continuous Generators make
biogas all the time. Waste is
continuously fed in and biogas is
produced at a steady rate, more
suited to large-scale biogas
projects
- Biogas generators need the following:
- 1) an inlet for waste material to be put in
- 2) an outlet for the digested material to
be removed throught
- 3) an outlet so that the biogas
can be piped to where it is
needed
- Four Factors to Consider
When Designing a Generator
- Cost: Continuous is more
expensive than batch because
waste has to be mechanically
pumped in and removed
- Convenience:
Batch are less
because they
continually need
loading, emptying
and cleaned
- Efficiency: Gas is produced more quickly
at 35oC. If the temperature falls below
this gas production is slower. Generators
need to be insulated by solar heaters. No
leaks or gas will be lost
- Position: The waste will smell
during delivery so generators are
sited away from homes. Located
fairly close to waste source
- Using Biofuels has Economic and Environmental Effects
- 1) Greener alternative to fossil fuels.
They are carbon neutral (except fossil
fuels are needed for production)
- 2) Doesn't produce sulfur
dioxide or nitrogen oxide which
causes acid rain
- 3) Methane is given off from untreated waste
- 4) Raw material is cheap and avaliable
- 5) Digested material is better fertiliser; more crops
- 6) Saves drudgery
- 7) Waste
disposal system;
gets rids of
animal and
human waste
- Managing Food Production
- The "Efficiency" of Food Production can be Improved by....
- 1) Reducing the Number of stages in
the Food Chain
- There's less energy and less biomass
every time you move up a stage in a food
chain. So for a given area of land,
produce more food by crop growth than
grazing animals. Reducing the number of
stages. But still demand for meat products
- 2) Restricting the Energy Lost by Farm
Animals
- Pigs and chicken intensively
farmed; kept close together
indoors in small pens, so that
they are warm but don't
move about. Saves them
wasting energy and giving
out heat. Grow faster on less
food. It's cheaper for both
the farmer and us
- Developing New Food Source like Mycoprotein
- Mycoprotein means protein from
fungi. Makes meat substitues for
vegetarians. Fusarium is the main
source of mycoprotein. Fungus is
grown in fermenters, using glucose
syrup as food. It is obtained by
digesting maize starch with enzymes.
Fungus respires aerobically.
Sterilised using steam and air supply
filtered, then harvested and purified
- It's an efficient way of
producing protein. It
grows quickly and
doesn't need space.
Uses waste materials
- Problems with Food Production and Distribution
- Efficient Food Production Involves Compromises and Conflict
- 1) Some people treating animals
in unnatural and uncomfortable
conditions is cruel. Growing
demand for organic meat; not
intensively farmed
- 2) Crowded conditions;
increase spread of diesease
- 3) Antibiotics animals have can
enter humans. This allows
microbes that infect humans to
become resistant to them
- 4) Animals need to be kept warm to
reduce energy loss as heat. Powered
by fossil fuels.
- 5) Fish stocks are low, yet
fish feeds animals that are
intensively farmed; animals
wouldn't usually eat this food
source
- Food Distribution also Cause Problems
- Some food products have lots
of food mile, as they are
transported a long way.
Expensive and bad for the
environment as fossil fuels are
used which produced CO2
contributing to global warming
- Overfishing is Decreasing Fish Stocks
- Less fish to eat, ocean food chains
are affected. We need to maintain
fish stocks at a level where the fish
continue to breed. This is sustainable
food production; having enough food
without using resources faster than
they are renewed.
- Maintained by:
- Fishing Quotas- limits on the
number and size of fish that
can be caught in certain
areas. Prevent single
species from being over
fished
- Net Size- limits of the mesh size of
fish net. Reduces number of
unwanted fish; accidently caught.
Younger fish will slip through the net
allowing them to reach a breeding age