Environmental Value System
Systems
Energy and Equilibria
Sustainability
Humans and Pollution
100

______ is influenced by cultural (including religious), economic and sociopolitical context, democratic or authoritarian 

Environmental Value System

100

An assemblage of parts, working together forming a functional whole

What is a system?

100

Governs the flow of energy in a system and the ability to do work.

Energy is neither created nor destroyed

Entropy (chaos) of a system not in equilibrium will tend to increase over time (energy conversions are never 100%)

What are the laws of thermodynamics

100

Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to met their own needs

What is Sustainability

100

the area of land and water required to sustainably provide all resources at the rate at which they are being consumed by a given population.

What is an Ecological footprint

200

James Lovelock states that Earth is a synergistic, self-regulating system. Planet functions as an organism.

What is Gia Hypothesis

200

Exchange energy but not mater (exist in experimental practices like a sealed aquarium) (Earth)

What is a closed system

200

response that tends to counteract a deviation from equilibrium. “fights back” - Predator Pray relationship

What is Negative feedback

200

the standing stock (total amount) of a natural resource. These are things that people value either economically or intrinsically

What is Natural Capital 

200

Release of pollutants from a single, clearly identifiable site/ source

What is point source pollution

300

A Pesticide plant released poisonous methyl isocyanate from the plant. It is the worst industrial disaster ever. 

Where is Bophal, India

300

A simplified version of reality that can be used to understand how a system works and to predict how it will respond to change

What is a model?

300

A species' average population size in a particular habitat. The species population size is limited by environmental factors like adequate food, shelter, water, and mates.

Carrying capacity

300

Natural resources taken do not exceed the environment’s capacity to disperse, absorb, recycle or otherwise neutralize their harmful effects

What is Natural Income?

300

Mostly organic compounds that are resistant to degradation (breaking down) through chemical or biological processes

what is persistent pollution

400

Chemicals called chlorofluorocarbons, which used to be found in everything from aerosol cans, air conditioners, deodorants, paints, and refrigerators have caused what to form over Antarctica in the spring.

What is the Ozone hole

400

Something produced at the end of a system. The symbol is an arrow moving out of a system

What is an Output?

400

Minimum amount of change within a system that will destabilize it, causing it to reach a new equilibrium

What is tipping point

400

a scientific appraisal of the condition and trends in the world’s ecosystems and the services they provide using environmental indicators, as well as the scientific basis for action to conserve and use them sustainably

What is the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA)

400

Repeated and continuous pollution over a long period of time.

●Factory that continuously leaks waste from a pipe into a river over many years

What is chronic pollution?

500

They believe people will always find a way out of difficulties (political, economic, environmental, etc.) Economic growth defines the value of a project.

What is cornucopian or technocentric

500

a system in which both materials and energy are exchanged across the boundaries of the system Most common system Example: Rainforest, Ecosystems

What is An open system?

500

When Only 10% of the energy is available to next trophic level. The pyramid of energy is always upright because at each transfer about 80 - 90% of the energy available at lower trophic level is used up to perform metabolic activities and as heat lost to the environment

What is the 10% rule

500

–Provide baseline study before any environmental development

–Assess possible impacts on environment society and economy then make suggestions to mitigate impacts

–Continued monitoring of site during and after development

What is the Environmental Impact Assessment? (EIA)

500

Measuring abiotic factors that change as a result of the pollutant (oxygen content of water) and recording the presence or absence of indicator species

What is Indirect detection and motoring of pollution