Transcript Slide 1

Lecture 5
The Age of Stupid.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7StWHQCakI&feature=related
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Don't miss this important, one-time-only U.S. screening of the global warming docudrama, The Age of Stupid.
September 21, 2009
6:30 p.m.
Hollywood USA - CollegeStation
1401 Earl Rudder Fwy S
College Station, TX, 77845
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Click Here to Purchase Tickets
http://www.ncm.com/Fathom/Upcoming/Locations.aspx?eventid=809&zip=77845&eventdate=9/21/2009
Immediately following the film will be a special event simulcast from New York, featuring a performance by Radiohead's
Thom Yorke and comments from Kofi Annan, James Hansen, Moby, as well as leading climate experts and activists.
On Monday, September 21, MoveOn members in the College Station area have a special opportunity to watch the onenight-only premiere of an important new film called The Age of Stupid.
The film is a powerful "docudrama" set in the year 2055, after global warming has done massive damage to humanity.
Oscar-nominated actor Pete Postlethwaite stars as a historian who "looks back" on real footage from 2008 to try to answer
the question, "why didn't we stop climate change while we had the chance?"
Assignment for Tues:
Do Study Quiz for Chapter 4.
Read Chapter 6
Chapter 6:
Principles of Ecology
Self-Sustaining Mechanisms in Ecosystems
Homeostasis
• Like organisms, ecosystems
possess many mechanisms
that either resist change or
help them recover from
change.
• These mechanisms help
keep natural systems in a
state of relative constancy.
FIGURE 1: Water hyacinth in a
Florida waterway
Courtesy of Nancy Mayberry/U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
The Resilience of Ecosystems
• In ecosystems, changes in
biotic and abiotic
conditions lead to a cascade
of effects, but the systems
tend to return to normal
over time.
• The ability to resist change
is called resilience.
FIGURE 2: Ecosystem balance
FIGURE 4: Regaining balance in a polluted stream
Species Diversity and Stability
Ecologists still debate the reasons why some
ecosystems are stable and some are not.
We do know that reductions
in species diversity can
destabilize ecosystems.
FIGURE 6: Diversity vs. latitude
6.2 Natural Succession: Establishing
Life on Lifeless Ground
• Ecosystems can form on barren or relatively
lifeless ground by a process called natural
succession.
FIGURE 07a: Lichens
(the dark blotches) are
fungi that grow on
rocks and slowly erode
their surface
Courtesy of Dan Chiras
FIGURE 07b: Primary succession
FIGURE 9: Secondary succession
FIGURE 08a (left): Mount St. Helens in
southwest Washington was surrounded by a
scenic northern coniferous forest prior to its
eruption in 1980. FIGURE 08b (below): The
aftermath of the eruption.
Copyright © Weyerhaeuser. Used
with permission.
Copyright © Weyerhaeuser. Used with permission.
FIGURE 08c: Secondary succession on Mt. St. Helens
Copyright © Weyerhaeuser. Used with permission.
FIGURE 08d: The Mount St. Helens area in 2007
© EdBookPhoto/Alamy Images
FIGURE 11: The evolution of life on Earth
Evolution By Natural Selection
• Natural selection is the driving force behind
evolution.
• It consists of natural forces that select for
those members of a population that are
superior in one or more features.
• These advantages increase chances of
surviving and reproducing.
• Natural selection weeds out the less fit
organisms of a population, leaving behind the
fittest.
Genetic Variation:
The Raw Material of Evolution
• Genetic differences in organisms of a population are called
genetic variation.
• Genetic variation of organisms in a population may give
some members of a population an advantage over others.
• Genetic variation comes from:
– mutations
– sexual reproduction
– “crossing over,” a process that occurs during the formation of
sperm and ova
• Genetic variation produces variation in populations in
structure, function, and behavior.
“London” smog and the English peppered moth
Air Pollution, M. Jacobson
London smog and the English peppered
moth
Natural selection
6.4 Human Impact on Ecosystems
• Human activities alter the environment by
changing its biotic and abiotic components––
directly or indirectly.
FIGURE S01_1:
Restored wetland
in the southeastern
United States
Courtesy of Gary Kramer/NRCS USDA
Altering Biotic Factors
• Introduction of foreign species
– These species may
proliferate without
control, causing major
economic and
environmental
damage.
FIGURE 14: Zebra mussel
Courtesy of U.S. Fish & Wildlife Services
FIGURE 13: The current range of Africanized Honey Bees
in the United States (in grey)
Adapted from Carl Hayden Bee Research Center/USDA ARS, Africanized
Honey Bees, http://ars.usda.gov/Research/docs.htm?docid=11059.
Simplifying Ecosystems
• Tampering with abiotic and biotic factors
tends to reduce species diversity and thus
simplify ecosystems.
• This makes them considerably
more vulnerable to natural
forces.
FIGURE 15: Fomer range of the
American chestnut
(now almost extinct)
Why Study Impacts?
• Being able to predict impacts permits us to
select the least harmful and most
sustainable development options.