Battle For The Biosphere
Quick Starter …
• What is the biosphere?
• Use this to help!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9fEUG5Sg
NM
Answer …
• The regions of the surface and atmosphere of
the earth or another planet occupied by living
organisms.
What is an Ecosystem?
• A grouping of non living and living species that
interact with each other in their local
environment …
• A Biome on the other hand is just a large scale
ecosystem …
Quick Question …
• How many Biomes are there on
Earth?
Answer …
• There are 5 major biomes on Earth …
Aquatic, Deserts, Forests, Grasslands, Tundra
They Are Split Further …
• Aquatic – Freshwater and Saltwater
• Grassland - Savanna and Temperate Grassland
• Desert – Cold, Hot, Semi Arid, Coastal
• Forest – Tropical, Coniferous, Deciduous
• Tundra - Arctic and Alpine
Our Biosphere Is A Life Support System
• It regulates the gases that makes up the
atmosphere – plants absorb C02 and produce
oxygen for us to breathe in.
• It regulates the water cycle – plants slow the
flow of water to rivers to filter water to make
it clean.
• It keeps soil healthy for plants to grow – new
nutrients are provided by rotting plant
material.
Goods Provided For Us …
• Foods – Fish, Meat, Fruits, Nuts, Berries.
• Medicines – Vitamins, Plants used to make
medicines.
• Raw Materials – Timber, Bamboo, Rubber,
Water, Oil and Gas.
Threats To The Biosphere …
• Directly – Deforestation, Mining, Quarrying,
Farming, Overfishing.
• Indirectly – Pollution leads to … Sea
temperature rise, Seawater acidification,
melting of ice caps, Changes in amount of
rainfall, Treeline changes, Stress within
ecosystem due to rapid change.
Reasons For Deforestation …
• Timber used for buildings, furniture and fuel.
• Transport Routes
• Building Human Settlements
• Building Dams and power stations to provide
power.
• Mining and quarrying minerals for
construction industry, jewellery, etc.
• Creation of agricultural land ..
Management Of The Biosphere …
• RAMSAR – 1971, 168 countries signed a treaty to
conserve the worlds wetlands. Wetlands provide
rich biodiversity with many rare species.
Population Growth means wetlands are drained
for farmland.
• National Parks – Started in 1951, conserves areas
of natural beauty in the UK – 15 parks. Important
for leisure and to preserve wildlife and
environment. Threatened by any development
that would degrade ecosystems – eg: mining.
Quick Question …
• Describe one way of conserving
threatened environments?
Answer
• In the UK, National Parks conserve areas
of special beauty. The area covered by
the Parks is protected by law and any
development that would harm the
environment is not allowed.
Local Factors That Affect Biomes …
• Altitude – different plants grow at different
temperatures within the same biome. The
higher the altitude the lower the temperature.
• Rainfall – Different types and amount of palnts
will grow in different parts of the biome
depending on the amount of rainfall received.
Inland areas are usually drier than coastal
areas.
• Distance from the sea can affect temperature,
especially amounts of rainfall.
• Rock and soil type – this can affect how fertile
different areas are within a biome.
• Drainage – swamps and bogs occur where
drainage is poor. Fewer, more specialist plants
grow in boggy areas.
Sustainability
• Everything that we need for our survival and
well-being depends, either directly or
indirectly, on our natural environment.
Sustainability creates and maintains the
conditions under which humans and nature
can exist in productive harmony, that permit
fulfilling the social, economic and other
requirements of present and future
generations.
Possible Tensions
Economic
• Individuals and communities often want
to make lots of money, and may use
resources in the biosphere to do this.
This provides tensions as it may damage
the environment in the long term. This
would mean it’s not sustainable
economically either, and it may harm or
exploit others in the future.
Social
• To be socially sustainable something
must not benefit one group/individual at
the expense of another. It also means
consulting people on an equal basis. This
can provide tensions because if everyone
is to benefit, this may put the
environment at risk. There are also
economic tensions as some businesses
may flourish at the expense of others.
Environmental
Being environmentally sustainable means
not harming natural resources so they
cannot regenerate or continue in the long
term. There are economic tensions as
people want to make as much money as
possible, as well as social tensions as
everyone wants to improve the standard of
living.

Battle for the biosphere pp

  • 1.
    Battle For TheBiosphere
  • 2.
    Quick Starter … •What is the biosphere? • Use this to help! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9fEUG5Sg NM
  • 3.
    Answer … • Theregions of the surface and atmosphere of the earth or another planet occupied by living organisms.
  • 5.
    What is anEcosystem? • A grouping of non living and living species that interact with each other in their local environment … • A Biome on the other hand is just a large scale ecosystem …
  • 6.
    Quick Question … •How many Biomes are there on Earth?
  • 7.
    Answer … • Thereare 5 major biomes on Earth … Aquatic, Deserts, Forests, Grasslands, Tundra
  • 8.
    They Are SplitFurther … • Aquatic – Freshwater and Saltwater • Grassland - Savanna and Temperate Grassland • Desert – Cold, Hot, Semi Arid, Coastal • Forest – Tropical, Coniferous, Deciduous • Tundra - Arctic and Alpine
  • 15.
    Our Biosphere IsA Life Support System • It regulates the gases that makes up the atmosphere – plants absorb C02 and produce oxygen for us to breathe in. • It regulates the water cycle – plants slow the flow of water to rivers to filter water to make it clean. • It keeps soil healthy for plants to grow – new nutrients are provided by rotting plant material.
  • 16.
    Goods Provided ForUs … • Foods – Fish, Meat, Fruits, Nuts, Berries. • Medicines – Vitamins, Plants used to make medicines. • Raw Materials – Timber, Bamboo, Rubber, Water, Oil and Gas.
  • 18.
    Threats To TheBiosphere … • Directly – Deforestation, Mining, Quarrying, Farming, Overfishing. • Indirectly – Pollution leads to … Sea temperature rise, Seawater acidification, melting of ice caps, Changes in amount of rainfall, Treeline changes, Stress within ecosystem due to rapid change.
  • 20.
    Reasons For Deforestation… • Timber used for buildings, furniture and fuel. • Transport Routes • Building Human Settlements • Building Dams and power stations to provide power. • Mining and quarrying minerals for construction industry, jewellery, etc. • Creation of agricultural land ..
  • 21.
    Management Of TheBiosphere … • RAMSAR – 1971, 168 countries signed a treaty to conserve the worlds wetlands. Wetlands provide rich biodiversity with many rare species. Population Growth means wetlands are drained for farmland. • National Parks – Started in 1951, conserves areas of natural beauty in the UK – 15 parks. Important for leisure and to preserve wildlife and environment. Threatened by any development that would degrade ecosystems – eg: mining.
  • 22.
    Quick Question … •Describe one way of conserving threatened environments?
  • 23.
    Answer • In theUK, National Parks conserve areas of special beauty. The area covered by the Parks is protected by law and any development that would harm the environment is not allowed.
  • 24.
    Local Factors ThatAffect Biomes …
  • 25.
    • Altitude –different plants grow at different temperatures within the same biome. The higher the altitude the lower the temperature. • Rainfall – Different types and amount of palnts will grow in different parts of the biome depending on the amount of rainfall received. Inland areas are usually drier than coastal areas. • Distance from the sea can affect temperature, especially amounts of rainfall.
  • 27.
    • Rock andsoil type – this can affect how fertile different areas are within a biome. • Drainage – swamps and bogs occur where drainage is poor. Fewer, more specialist plants grow in boggy areas.
  • 28.
    Sustainability • Everything thatwe need for our survival and well-being depends, either directly or indirectly, on our natural environment. Sustainability creates and maintains the conditions under which humans and nature can exist in productive harmony, that permit fulfilling the social, economic and other requirements of present and future generations.
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 32.
    • Individuals andcommunities often want to make lots of money, and may use resources in the biosphere to do this. This provides tensions as it may damage the environment in the long term. This would mean it’s not sustainable economically either, and it may harm or exploit others in the future.
  • 33.
  • 35.
    • To besocially sustainable something must not benefit one group/individual at the expense of another. It also means consulting people on an equal basis. This can provide tensions because if everyone is to benefit, this may put the environment at risk. There are also economic tensions as some businesses may flourish at the expense of others.
  • 36.
  • 38.
    Being environmentally sustainablemeans not harming natural resources so they cannot regenerate or continue in the long term. There are economic tensions as people want to make as much money as possible, as well as social tensions as everyone wants to improve the standard of living.