Environmental Issues Test 1
types of sources
1. Primary: original data, analysis, peer-review, academic journal articles, meta-analysis 2. Secondary: reviews by scientists or agency, review articles in academic journals, review/report by government agency 3. Tertiary: reports describing or about research, news papers, magazine, Wikipedia, encyclopedia, book, not yet published
Were more primitive societies more in tune with nature? (3 arguments)
1. Yes, more dependent on nature, not living in cities 2. No, physical exposure does not necessarily mean a deeper understanding. More knowledge now with greater levels of technology to help us explore. 3. No, today we preserve nature whereas ancient societies just lived in it
how to make a scientific argument
1. claim: statement/hypothesis you are asking another person to accept (clear, declarative, cause and effect) 2. evidence: grounds for a claim, source of data (numerical data, facts, examples, addresses claim at hand) 3. Warrant: justification that shows why the claim is valid and evidence supporting the claim
four phases of think tanks
1. early 1900s- rich private families providing research 2. post-WWII- government supported agencies 3. 1970-80s- smaller groups blurring the line between research and advocacy 4. recent- small ephemeral groups in pursuit of short-term policy/political agendas
Five theories in The Origin of Species (Darwin adapted from Mayr)
1. evolution as such: species evolve 2. common descent: shared common ancestors 3. gradualism: evolutionary change through small incremental steps 4. species diversification: divergence from common ancestors creates multiplication of species (explanation for biodiversity) 5. natural selection: differential survival and reproduction of some individuals over others in a population sue to phenotypic differences ( if heritable then favored traits will be differentually represented in the next generation)
controversy around natural selection/evolution
1. fundamental paradigm shift between "typological thinking" and variation (species not created by the creator and therefore not perfect) 2. evolution is stochastic (governed by the laws of chance) (blind?) 3. species can change
Research/Solution challenges (3)
1. open systems: exterior influence and variables, no boundaries, no control (chaos theory/ Jurassic park) 2. lag time: long time between stimulus and response, difficult to prove causation, most human change is slow over time with cumulus effects 3. irreversible consequences: long time or impossible to reverse damage (soil erosion on Easter Island, loss of old growth forests, genetic diversity, extinction)
The Modern Synthesis
1. phenotype= genotype+environment 2. acquired characteristics are not inherited 3. genes do not blend 4. ultimate source of variation is mutation 5. environmental factors can affect the rate of mutation but not the direction
Vikings in greenland (5)
1. self-inflicted environmental damage: sod houses generated erosion, cattle brought over drained resources, soil deprivation, overgrazing and overharvesting 2. failure to respond to the natural environment: didn't eat fish because of a culture/pride prohibition 3. hostile neighbors they were, refused Inuit help 4. loss of friendly neighbors Europe stopped supplying them 5. climate change mini ice-age
Social traps (3)
1. tragedy of the commons 2. time delay: actions that produce benefits today but set into motion events that cause problems later on (fossil fuel) 3. sliding reinforce: actions that are beneficial at first may change conditions, decreasing their benefits over time (pesticide)
global environmentalism
Apollo space program ushering in new era of global unification after first pictures of the world come out, idea of a common global environment and interconnectedness
Natural selection
Assumes organisms vary between individuals within their own species 1. Variation: leads to differences in survival and reproduction 2. Heritability: variation must be genetically inherited (necessity of reproduction ability) 3. Differential survival and reproduction "survival of the fittest": ability to survive and reproduce (the essence)
John Muir
Biocentric preservationist, national park service (Stephen Mather was a follower of Muir and headed Park Service)
source quality: CRAP test
Currency Reliability Authority Purpose
should the news be balanced in reporting?
Depends: if there is a natural disaster (hurricane) with a chance of changing paths, best to evacuate the entire area. But it is always important for the public to receive total facts (how science is reliable). Balanced also doesn't always mean representative.
the nested box model of sustainability
Environment ( social ( economy))
Easter Island collapse
Environment couldn't support human life, bio-diversity declined (mass deforestation, environmental catastrophe), resource deficit, population extinction (smallpox)
IPAT factors
Impacting factors Population size Affluence Technology (urbanization)
Is evolution blind?
In the sense that there is no predetermined goal, but not in its operating manner because selection is based off fitness and reproduction
Less polar bears
Mother polar bears need high levels of fat to produce cubs, not getting it, decline in birth rates/ survival of cubs.
Who started the environmentalist movement?
Plato! soil degredation, de-forestation, bio-centric preservation
Utilitarian conservation
Pragmatic resource conservation. nature and the environment should be saved not because they are beautiful or for moral reasons, but because they hold utilitarian value to humans
think tanks
Privately funded (usually) organization that performs research and advocacy concerning topics such as social policy, political strategy, economics, military, technology, and culture.
Thomas Malthus
Resource limitation: all species produce more offspring than survive
Gifford Pinchot
Utilitarian conservationist, first U.S. Forest Service chief (1905)
Are polar bears drowning?
Yes which is surprising because they're great swimmers. Food source shift giving them less stored fat and energy for their long swims.
Pervasiveness of unsustainability
agriculture, release of dangerous pollutants into ecological systems, failure to reduce greenhouse gasses, city and regional planning, architecture, transportation, energy production, industrial processes, product fabrication, household consumption
sustainable societies
balanced with the natural world. primitive societies were, no modern society is
Characteristics of pseudoscience fields
based on assumptions, beliefs, or correlations not supported by data, biased, not reproducible/ quantifiable, underlying mechanism is not investigated
There are more polar bears now
behavioral change in polar bear populations since ice bergs/sheets have decreased, forcing them inland as they cant spend as much time on the water hunting. now they're going after caribou and nesting birds on land as their food preferences shift
Lamarck
champion of evolutionary thought: theory of inheritance by acquired characteristics (animals adapting to their environments- not a good indicator of what their offspring will inherit)
evolution
changes in allele frequencies over time
Conservation Ex Situ
conservation not just where animals live, it is where we all live and knowing how to adjust food habits, urban systems, and yard planting to accommodate nature.
Scientific (broad) agreement
control human population growth and impact, resource transition to an economy that protects ecosystem capitol/ environmentally benign processes, community transition from car-dominated to smart-growth
Darwin
descent with modification: changes over the course of generations in the properties of organism populations gave mechanism for evolutionary change (patterns of relationships, species distribution suggested descent from a common ancestor)
Case study: declining marine mammal populations
dramatic declines in colonies of sea otters, seals, whales (shifting in food preferences)
How to avoid social traps
education
Most important factor in influencing public opinion on climate change
elite partisan battle: without consensus among the elites, the issue doesn't become mainstreamed
Mono lake
example of sound science: shows the interconnectedness of cities, nature, and the systems that support human life (open-systems idea)
modern environmentalism
focused on human health post-WWII and the attempt to improve conditions (pollution), organized fight for environmental issues (regulatory processes, hearings, mass media causes)
Environmental concerns today
harvesting, clean air, water, forests, fossil fuels
Cascade theory
humans dramatically reduce whale biomass: decline in natural food for orcas, orcas systematically shifting eating preferences in sequential order with respect to animal size, greater demand on natural prey populations (harbor seals) (potential collapse for all) (open systems?)
true sustainability
intersection (3 legged stool) of economic profitability, social responsibility, and environmental conservation
sustainable development
meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
Biomimicry
mimicking biology in technology and design (designing swimsuits by observing dolphins)
problems with the 3 legged stool
must be viewed holistically, not independently, and balanced. society and the economy operate within the context of a natural environment of limited capacity, changes must be made to social/economic institutions
small populations (evolution)
non-adaptation mechanisms for evolutionary change become stronger in smaller populations, smaller populations become less fit in their environments (more insulated system, less traits)
Was evolution immediately accepted?
nope! 1. radical departure from current (past) thinking 2. conflict with religion 3. Darwin didn't get everything correct (blending theory of inheritance- doesn't account for previous generations, didn't understand where variation was created)
Possible causes for extinction (4)
overchill, overkill, overill, overgrill
wicked problems
policy problems that tend to be unprecedented, multi-causal, highly complex with solutions that involve tradeoffs (climate change, deforestation, over-consumption)
Evolution based on the property of ________________ not individuals
populations/species -different evolutionary speed rates/ generation turnover (insects are faster at adapting than large mammals)
Biocentric preservation
preservation ethic, nature has an independent and inherent value. emphasizes the right of other organisms to live
Options to ease environmental impacts today
privitization, regulation, volunteer cooperation, co-ops, polluter pays
Natural selection is a _______ in evolution
process (evolution is a record)
Natural selection acts on _______ not ______ trait values
relative; absolute (trait needs to be better not perfect: natural selection doesn't create perfect beings)
good science
scientific methods, peer review, can be uncertain
Best reporting reflects....
scientific opinion and the active debates surrounding issues
Science in the media
spreading awareness through alarm, editors not fully understanding the theoretical models/assumptions, not checking facts, sell add time/gain funding/spreading an agenda. however, the ability to make accurate predictions is a hallmark of good science
sustainable systems
sustainable if it can be continued indefinitely without depleting any of the material or energy resources required to keep it running
Characteristics of scientific fields
systematic observation, empirical testing (hypothesizing), evidence gathering, formulating general theories, peer-review or reputable journal/source