Chapter 1 Reviewer Envi Sci
Chapter 1 Reviewer Envi Sci
Chapter 1 Reviewer Envi Sci
Summary
1. All life depends on energy from the sun, solar capital, and the resources and ecological services
of the earth, natural capital, to survive. An environmentally sustainable society provides for the
current needs of its people without undermining the ability of future generations to do the same.
2. The world’s population is growing about 1.2% per year, which adds about 77 million people
per year. Economic growth increases a country’s capacity to provide goods and services to its
people. Economic development uses economic growth to improve standards of living.
Globalization is a process of increasingly interconnecting people through social, economic, and
environmental global changes.
3. The earth’s main resources are perpetual resources like solar energy, renewable resources like
forests and fresh water, and nonrenewable resources like oil and gas. The resources can be
depleted or degraded by overuse, by waste, by pollution, and by man’s increasing “ecological
footprint.”
4. The principle types of pollution are air, water, soil, and food pollutants. We can prevent
pollution or clean up pollution. Prevention is far preferable because cleaning up pollution often
causes additional pollutants in another part of the environment.
5. The basic causes of today’s environmental problems are population growth, wasteful use of
resources, the tragedy of the commons, poverty, poor environment accounting, and ecological
ignorance. They are interconnected because of political and economic practices that are not
equitable for various populations, in resource consumption and in technological applications.
6. The world’s current course is not sustainable. Environmental sustainable development
encourages environmentally beneficial forms of economic growth and discourages
environmentally harmful growth.
A. Environmental science studies how the earth works, our interaction with the earth, and
the methods/ procedures we use to deal with environmental problems.
B. Environmental science considers everything that affects a living organism.
C. Ecology studies relationships between living organisms and their environment.
D. Environmentalism is a social movement dedicated to protecting life support systems for all
species.
E. A path toward sustainability includes five subthemes that are addressed throughout the text:
1. Natural capital—natural resources and services that keep us and other species alive.
2. Natural capital degradation—when human activities use renewable resources
unsustainably.
3. Solutions—are sought to degradation of natural resources.
4. Trade-offs—or compromises are made to resolve conflicts.
5. Individuals matter—to search for solutions to environmental problems.
F. Life and economies depend on solar capital (energy from the sun) and natural capital.
B. Material resources we get from the environment are classified as perpetual, renewable, or
nonrenewable.
1. A perpetual resource is renewed continuously, like solar energy.
2. Sustainable yield is the highest rate of use on an indefinite scale without degradation or
depletion.
3. Environmental degradation occurs when use of resources exceeds rate of replacement.
C. The Tragedy of the Commons describes the overuse or degradation of freely available
resources such as ocean pollution, abuse of national parks, air pollution, etc. No one individual
owns these free-access resources.
CASE STUDY: The number of affluent consumers will soon double, as people in
underdeveloped countries attain a middleclass lifestyle. China is already a leading consumer of
many resources, and its economy and population are continuing to grow at a rapid rate. Thus,
its ecological footprint and overall level of resource consumption are expected to continue to
grow.
D. Environmental worldviews and ethics determine the way people view the seriousness of
environmental problems.
1. Your environmental worldview is your assumptions and values about the world and your
role.
a. The planetary management worldview holds that nature exists to meet our needs.
b. The stewardship worldview holds that we mange the earth, but we have an ethical
responsibility to be stewards of the earth.
c. The environmental worldview holds that we are connected to nature and that nature
exists for all species equally.
CASE STUDY: Chattanooga, Tennessee, was once one of the most polluted cities in the United
States. In the mid-1980s civic leaders gathered together community members to identify
problems and brainstorm solutions. After years of encouraging zero-emission industries,
implementing recycling programs, and
renovating much of the city, Chattanooga is an example of what can be accomplished when
cities build their social capital.
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