Significant Ideas:
Historical events influence the development of Environmental Value Systems (EVSs) and environmental movements.
EVSs form a spectrum between ecocentric, anthropocentric, and technocentric views.
Knowledge and Understanding:
Historical influences include literature, media, disasters, international agreements, and technology.
An EVS represents a worldview guiding perception and evaluation of environmental issues, shaped by various contexts.
The development of an EVS involves education, culture, and media inputs leading to decisions and evaluations (outputs).
Examples of EVS Influences:
Gaia Hypothesis (James Lovelock); Silent Spring (Rachel Carson); Chernobyl, Fukushima disasters; Minamata disaster; Earth Day; Rio Earth Summit.
Ecocentric Viewpoint:
Integrates social, environmental dimensions; emphasizes ecological importance; promotes self-restraint and biorights.
Anthropocentric Viewpoint:
Advocates sustainable management via regulations, taxes; encourages debate for pragmatic solutions.
Technocentric Viewpoint:
Optimistic view of technological advancements solving environmental issues; focuses on scientific research and resource manipulation.
Significant Ideas:
Systems approach clarifies complex interactions in ecological/societal contexts.
Systems Knowledge:
Systems consist of storages and flows that exchange energy and matter.
Flows can be transfers (location change) or transformations (chemical/state change).
Open systems exchange both energy and matter; closed systems exchange only energy; isolated systems exchange neither.
System Diagrams:
Used to represent flows and storages; storages as boxes, flows as arrows indicating their magnitude and direction.
Applications:
Construct and evaluate system diagrams related to ecological systems (e.g., carbon cycling).
Significant Ideas:
Thermodynamics govern energy flow and work capacity in systems with potential equilibria.
Positive feedback destabilizes systems; negative feedback stabilizes them.
Laws of Thermodynamics:
First Law: Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transformed.
Second Law: Entropy increases over time, affecting energy available for work.
Stability and Resilience:
Resilience definitions and concepts of tipping points influence systems equilibrium.
Applications:
Discuss implications of thermodynamics in ecological systems and evaluate tipping points.
Significant Ideas:
Sustainability ensures resource use does not compromise future availability.
Natural capital supports ecosystem services critical for human survival.
Indicators and EIAs:
Environmental indicators (biodiversity, pollution, climate) gauge sustainability.
Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs) assess and mitigate potential impacts before projects.
Applications:
Discuss relationships between natural capital, income, sustainability, and evaluate effectiveness of EIAs.
Significant Ideas:
Pollution originates from human activities and manifests diversely across ecosystems.
Pollutants Classification:
Definitions, sources, point and non-point source distinctions; examples like DDT illustrate conflicts of utility vs. environmental impact.
Management Strategies:
Pollution management levels: altering human activity, controlling release, and ecosystem restoration.
Applications:
Evaluate pollutant management effectiveness and methods for each strategy.
Significant Ideas:
Species dynamics affected by interactions within biotic and abiotic environments.
Knowledge and Understanding:
Definitions of species, populations, habitats, and niches explained through examples and models.
Applications:
Interpret models illustrating ecological interactions like predation, competition, and resource use.
Significant Ideas:
Energy and nutrient flows in ecosystems represent community interactions.
Knowledge and Understanding:
Understand community definitions and the role of ecosystems in supporting interactions.
Significant Ideas:
Energy and matter flows link ecosystems.
Applications:
Analyze quantitative models and calculate values in energy transfers and matter flows.
Significant Ideas:
Climate impacts biomes; succession leads to climax communities.
Applications:
Discuss climate change impacts on biomes and analyze successional stages in ecosystems.
Significant Ideas:
Ecosystem investigation allows for comparisons and monitoring of impacts.
Applications:
Design and carry out ecological investigations, emphasizing continued improvement in methodologies.
Significant Ideas:
It is essential to quantify biodiversity forms for conservation efforts.
Knowledge and Understanding:
Definitions of biodiversity types: species, habitat, genetic.
Significant Ideas:
Evolution through natural selection drives biodiversity.
Knowledge and Understanding:
Speciation and isolation of populations influenced by geographical events.
Significant Idea:
Rapid declines in biodiversity driven by human activity.
Applications:
Explore case studies on endangered species focusing on ecological roles and threats.
Significant Ideas:
Conservation arguments vary depending on EVSs.
Applications:
Evaluate conservation strategies strengths and weaknesses.
Significant Ideas:
Hydrological cycle can be disrupted by human activity.
Significant Ideas:
Inequitable freshwater distribution leads to conflict.
Significant Ideas:
Aquatic systems' sustainability affects ecological balance.
Significant Ideas:
Identifying and managing aquatic pollution is crucial for environmental health.
Significant Ideas:
Soil systems are vital ecosystems influencing primary productivity.
Significant Ideas:
Socio-political and ecological factors influence food production sustainability.
Significant Ideas:
Human activities can harm soil fertility; conservation strategies are needed.
Significant Ideas:
The atmosphere influences all ecosystems.
Significant Ideas:
Ozone protects life from harmful UV rays; human activities threaten its balance.
Significant Ideas:
Smog results from fossil fuel combustion, affecting air quality.
Significant Ideas:
Acid deposition is a cross-border pollution issue affecting ecosystems.
Significant Ideas:
Energy source choices impact climate and sustainability.
Significant Ideas:
Human activities increase greenhouse gas levels, affecting global climates.
Significant Ideas:
Mitigation reduces causes of climate change; adaptation manages effects.
Significant Ideas:
Population growth models assess human dynamics and resource implications.
Significant Ideas:
Sustainability of natural capital relies on responsible management.
Significant Ideas:
Waste management plays a crucial role in sustainability efforts.
Significant Ideas:
Understanding carrying capacity is vital for sustainable resource use.
Foundations of Environmental Systems and Societies