Introduction Flashcards

1
Q

Conservation is a human issue

A

all issues driven by human populations, can only be solved by humans

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2
Q

Gough island

A

71 of 99 species are introduced

233 human landings on Gough = one species established every 3 to 4 landings

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3
Q

Should conservation

A

keep people in or keep them out?

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4
Q

Human History

A

Hunter-gathers -
Shift to nomadic then sedentary agriculture -
City dwelling (from 3kya) -
Late 18th century: Industrial revolution -
Mid-late 20th century: The Great Acceleration (of almost everything)

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5
Q

People born in 1950 were the first to see human population double in their lifetime

A

During the 20th century, more people were added to the world than in all of previous history

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6
Q

Current growth is ~0.9% p.a. - that’s ~66.3M people a year, 180,000 a day

A

Six countries account for half of this annual growth: India, China, Pakistan, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Indonesia

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7
Q

Inequalities in human populations

A

Access to education
Sanitation
Food Shelter

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8
Q

The majority of people will live in

A

urban areas by 2050

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9
Q

As a consequence of urbanisation

A

energy use, fertiliser consumption, water use, paper production, transportation will increase

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10
Q

As a consequence of urbanisation

A

CO2, methane, fish capture, nitrogen, forest loss, domestic land and terrestrial biosphere degradation increase

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11
Q

A Human-Dominated World

A

We consume about 1/3 of terrestrial and 1/10 of marine primary productivity (1/4-1/3 in some regions)

We dam rivers, preventing flow of sediment to the seas

We move earth: In 200 yrs in the UK we have excavated & built up >4 x the volume of Ben Nevis

We produce more reactive N than all other terrestrial processes combined

We cause extinctions and global climate change

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12
Q

planetary boundaries

A

Exploring the safe operating space for humanity

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13
Q

Transgressing planetary boundaries may trigger catastrophic, abrupt environmental change

9 boundaries identified

A

Approximate values derived for 7 of them

Interdependencies between boundaries are acknowledged

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14
Q

What are the planetary boundaries

A

Climate change

Novel entities

Stratospheric ozone depletion

Atmospheric aerosol loading

Ocean acidification

Biogeochemical flows (nitrogen and phosphorus) are high risk beyond zone of uncertainty

Freshwater use

Land-system change

Biosphere integrity (genetic diversity) high risk beyond zone of uncertainty

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15
Q

Does the extent of human activity justify the formal adoption of a new geological epoch?

A

Requires a global marker of an event in stratigraphic material (rock, sediment, or glacier ice; GSSP)

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16
Q

The Orbis spike implies that colonialism, global trade and coal brought about the Anthropocene.

A

Nuclear explosions:
Peak of 14C in annual rings of pine tree in Poland
Auxiliary markers: fossil pollen of GM crops, lead isotopes in ice cores, microplastics in marine sediments, diatoms in eutrophic lakes,

17
Q

The Great Acceleration of 1945-2000 was almost entirely driven by the OECD countries

A

The world’s poorest countries (~800M people) have contributed <1% of global cumulative CO2 emissions since 1800, but poorer countries are rapidly catching up, and China now the world’s largest emitter

18
Q

The biophysical demands of London require an area the size of all the ecologically productive land in the UK
Each resident of North America, Europe, Japan and Australia requires the biophysical output of 5-10 ha to support their lifestyles

A

There are only ~2 ha of productive land / water per person on Earth

19
Q

Per-capita footprint increases with development

A

USA is worst

Cuba has quality lifestyle but lower ecological footprint