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Ecological Problems
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Ecological Problems

Jan 01, 2016

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Ecological Problems. Biological Magnification. Increase or concentration of a substance, such as the pesticide DDT, in a food chain. OZONE DEPLETION. CFC’s are commonly used as: Refrigerants Styrofoams Solvents Aerosols. OZONE DEPLETION. Ozone protects the earth from harmful UVB rays. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Ecological Problems

Ecological Problems

Page 2: Ecological Problems

Biological magnification

• is the tendency of pollutants to become concentrated in successive trophic levels

Page 3: Ecological Problems

The "best" example

• of biomagnification comes from DDT.

Page 4: Ecological Problems

Plane Spraying DDT

• The chemical pesticide DDT was used around the world from the 1940s through the early 1970s to kill crop-eating and disease-carrying insects.

Page 5: Ecological Problems

DDT

• pesticide

Page 6: Ecological Problems

Biological Magnification

Increase or concentration of a substance, such as the pesticide DDT, in a food chain.

Page 7: Ecological Problems

Silent Spring (1962)Silent Spring (1962)

• Describes how DDT entered the food chain and accumulated in the fatty tissues of animals, including human beings, and caused cancer and genetic damage.

Page 8: Ecological Problems

Rachel Carson (1907-1964)

• Silent Springbrought a new public awareness that nature was vulnerable to human intervention.

Page 9: Ecological Problems

OZONE DEPLETION

• CFC’s are commonly used as:

• Refrigerants

• Styrofoams

• Solvents

• Aerosols

Page 10: Ecological Problems

BANNED

• In the early 1960s studies began to show that the chemical caused reproductive problems in animals and that it often disrupted the food chain. The use of DDT was banned in the United States in 1973.

Page 11: Ecological Problems

BANNED

• In the early 1960s studies began to show that the chemical caused reproductive problems in animals and that it often disrupted the food chain. The use of DDT was banned in the United States in 1973.

Page 12: Ecological Problems

OZONE

• O + O2 -> O3

• Forms naturally in the stratosphere

• Acts as protecting the earth from UV radiation

Page 13: Ecological Problems

OZONE DEPLETION

• Ozone protects the earth from harmful UVB rays.

• It has been thinning over Antarctica.

Page 14: Ecological Problems

OZONEO3

• UV rays split

Oxygen that add to O2 to make O3

Page 15: Ecological Problems

OZONE DEPLETION

• Ozone = 03 CFC = CCl4

Cl breaks off an oxygen from ozone

Page 16: Ecological Problems

Ozone Thinning Culprit: CFC’s

• Chlorofluorocarbons) are synthetic gases in which the hydrogen atoms of methane are replaced by atoms of fluorine and chlorine (e.g., CHF2Cl, CFCl3, CF2Cl2).

Page 17: Ecological Problems

Why McDonalds changed to paper containers.

Page 18: Ecological Problems

Should the School Use Styrofoam Lunch Trays?

Page 19: Ecological Problems

What is being done?

• Montreal Protocol in 1987 ultimately aiming to reduce CFC’s by half by the year 2000.

Page 20: Ecological Problems

Ozone Depletion Kills Krill (baleen whale food source)

Krill is a zooplankton

Page 22: Ecological Problems
Page 23: Ecological Problems

GLOBAL WARMING: Thegreenhouse effect

• is the rise in temperature that the Earth experiences because certain gases in the atmosphere (water vapor, carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, and methane, for example) trap energy from the sun.

• Greenhouse Effect Animation

Page 24: Ecological Problems
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Glacier Melting

• State of the Arctic on Vimeo

Page 28: Ecological Problems

DEFORESTATION

• Loss of Forests

REPLANT

Page 29: Ecological Problems

“Slash and Burn”

Page 30: Ecological Problems

Erosion in Madagascar due to Deforestation

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Rainforest Natives

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Burned landscape from "Slash and Burn" deforestation

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Erosion is More Likely with Deforestation

Page 34: Ecological Problems

ACID RAIN

Page 35: Ecological Problems

• Acid rain occurs when these gases react in the atmosphere with water, oxygen, and other chemicals to form various acidic compounds. Sunlight increases the rate of most of these reactions. The result is a mild solution of sulfuric acid and nitric acid.

• HowStuffWorks Videos "Acid Rain Videos"

Page 36: Ecological Problems
Page 37: Ecological Problems
Page 38: Ecological Problems

Acid Rain Origins

Page 39: Ecological Problems

pH of Acid Rain

• The pH of "normal" rain has traditionally been given a value of 5.6.

• However scientists now believe that the pH of rain may vary from 5.6 to a low of 4.5 with the average value of 5.0.

Page 40: Ecological Problems

Water Species Water Tolerance

Page 41: Ecological Problems

Ozone Hole

• Over Antarctica a depletion of the ozone layer has been increasing

Page 42: Ecological Problems

EXTINCTION

• End of a species

Page 43: Ecological Problems

Secondary Extinction

• The extinction of the dodo bird has caused the Calviera tree to become unable to reproduce since the dodo ate the fruit and processed the seeds of that tree.

Page 44: Ecological Problems

INVASIVE SPECIES

• Non-native (or alien) to the ecosystem

Kudzu from Japan to stop erosion

Garden purple loosestrife is taking over wetlands

Page 45: Ecological Problems

ASIAN TIGER MOSQUITO

• It is a carrier of dengue fever and two forms of encephalitis.

This small mosquitoarrived in

Houston in 1985, apparently in a shipment of used tires.Now is found in

at least 25 states

Page 46: Ecological Problems

Zebra Mussel

• Native to the Caspian and Black Seas, the zebra mussel hitched a ride in ballast water of a ship sometime in the mid-1980s and spread throughout the Great Lakes region and down the Mississippi.