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The Big Picture: systems of change
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What types of plants and animals were present before the mid-1950s? What type were found between the mid- 1950s and the 1960s? Reason for the difference in flora and fauna? What sorts of changes have taken place to the landscape over the past 30yrs? Has the climate changed during this time period? What were the causes originally proposed by the scientists? Why were these eventually rejected?
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Systems defined – a set of components that function together to act as a whole Ex) body, sewage treatment plant, city, river, Earth Open vs closed Open – not generally contained within boundaries/some energy or material moves into or out of Ex) ocean Closed – no such movement takes place Ex) Earth Systems respond to inputs and have outputs
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- Occurs when the output of the system also serves as an input and leads to further changes in the system - Ex) human temperature regulation – increase in temperature(input)/cooling of body(output) - Is this an example of positive or negative feedback?
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Occurs when an increase in output leads to a further increase in the output Ex) fire starts, leads to drying of wood nearby, that burns and leads to an even larger fire Considered destabilizing Ex) off-road vehicle use soil erosion
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Ex) changes in human population in large cities Is negative feedback always desirable and positive feedback always undesirable? It depends upon the period of time over which it occurs. Ex) re-introduction of wolves to Yellowstone
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Result from positive feedback mechanisms that are out of control resource use and growth of human population History of human population growth – in the past strong negative feedback cycles resulted in low growth(disease, limited capacity to produce food) Today???
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An example of positive feedback Occurs at a constant rate(rather than a constant amount) per time period Populations growing at a constant amount each year represent a linear function Populations growing at a constant rate each year represent an exponential function
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City A has a population of 100 in the year 2000. It has a growth rate of 30%. What will the population of city A be in the year 2020? f(t)= a(1+r) t where a = initial amount r = rate of increase t = time f(t) = 100(1 +.3) 20 = 19, 004 If continuous growth then use N = N 0 e kt
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Incompatible with the concept of sustainability Can be experienced by a population for the short term A positive feedback cycle
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Time necessary for the quantity being measured to double Approximately equal to 70 divided by the annual percentage growth rate Example: How long would it take a population to double that has an annual growth rate of 35%?
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Impossible to change only one thing because everything affects everything else Changes in one part of a system often have secondary and tertiary effects within a system For example: Cutting trees in a watershed less evapotranspiration more runoff more erosion more nutrients in the river changes in water quality human health impacts
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The physical and biological processes presently forming and modifying Earth can help explain the geologic and evolutionary history of Earth(the present is the key to the past) Does not imply that the magnitude and frequency of natural processes remain constant Can be used to predict what the future may bring
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A) input equal to output B) input less than output C) input greater than output Which of the above would you describe as a “steady state”? Explain your reasoning. Average residence time – the time it takes for a given part of the total reservoir of a particular material to be cycled through the system If the size of the reservoir and the rate of transfer are constant, then ART = total size of reservoir/avg rate of transfer
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Residence time for Carbon Pool – Earth’s crust – 100,000,000 Pg C Transfer rate – Volcanos 0.1 Pg C/year 0.1/100,000,000 = 1 x 10-9 = 0.0000001% yr Residence time – 100,000,000/.1 = 1,000,000,000 = 1 billion years Pool – Fossil Fuels 7,500 PgC Transfer rate - Burning of fossil fuels 6.3 PgC/yr What is the transfer rate? Residence time ?
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1) Do you think the residence time of carbon in the fossil fuel pool is realistic? Why or why not? 2) Why do you think it is important to understand turnover rate and residence time in the context of the global carbon cycle?
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Graph the orange tree example on p. 47 Why might you expect delays in the response to your input? These delays make problems more difficult to recognize In order to manage systems, we need to gain a better understanding of the following: --types of disturbances and changes that are likely to occur -- time periods over which changes occur -- the importance of each change to the long-term productivity of the system
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Life on Earth began ~3 billion years ago http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/history_of_th e_earth http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/history_of_th e_earth
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Biota – all living things within a given area Biosphere – the region of Earth where life exists/extends from the depths of the oceans to the summits of mountains
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A community of organisms and its local nonliving environment in which matter cycles and energy flows The Nature of Ecosystems - vary in size, composition, shape, variation of borders - natural or artificial - ecosystem functions
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Life manipulates the environment for the maintenance of life Proposed by James Lovelock in the early 1970s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqwZJD EZ9Ng https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqwZJD EZ9Ng
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1. exponential growth 2. lag time – time between a stimulus and the response of a system - may lead to overshoot and collapse(see Fig. 3.14 p. 51) 3. Irreversible consequences – ex) soil erosion http://www.geography4kids.com/files/land_ soil2.html http://www.geography4kids.com/files/land_ soil2.html
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