POPULATION AND POLLUTION - Fullerton College



POPULATION AND POLLUTION

The baby boom was in the 1950s when the American birthrate skyrocketed. When the so-called baby boomers were in their 20s, they were young and vibrant, and they added to American productivity. Today, however, the boomers are aging. Their children worry that elderly boomers will drain resources, not to mention national attention, from younger adults.

Human Population Growth

The world population increases the equivalent of a medium-sized city (200,000) every day and the equivalent of a country the size of Germany (80 million) every year. Most of the growth is coming from less-developed countries.

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Right now, there are about 6 billion people on the planet, but in the next 100 years, there will be about 8-11 billion. All populations need nutrients, space, water, and energy.

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This means that in about 50 years, the world will need double the amount of food, jobs, water, energy, and so on to maintain the same standard of living. Right now, half of our world’s population do not have electricity or indoor water and cannot read even enough to sign their name.

We are adding a billion more people to the planet much faster than we used to. We got our first billion in 1800; the second billion arrived in 1930; the third billion in 1960; and today there are 6 billion. Only if the growth rate continues to decline can there be zero population growth when births equal deaths and the population size remains steady.

The More-Developed Versus Less-Developed Countries

The MDCs of North America, Canada, England, and Europe, have a population growth under control and the people enjoy a good standard of living. The LDCs of South America, Africa, and Asia, have population growth out of control and the majority of people live in poverty.

The term “third-world countries” is an old term used to mean the less-developed countries. This term was introduced by those who thought of the United States and Europe as the first world and the former USSR as the second world.

The MDCs doubled their populations between 1850 and 1950 because of a decline in the death rate and modern medicines. The populations of a few of the MDCs, Italy, Denmark, Hungary, Sweden are actually decreasing in size. In contrast, there is no leveling off and no end in sight to U.S. population growth.

Although the death rate began to decline steeply in the LDCs following World War II with the importation of modern medicine from the MDCs, the birthrate remained high.

Comparing Age Structure

One way of characterizing population is by age groups. If there are more young women entering the reproductive years than there are older women leaving them, there will still be an increase in population. Most LDCs have a large proportion of young women under the age of 15.

Possible Solutions

1. Establish and/or strengthen family planning programs.

2. Use social progress to reduce the desire for large families by providing education, raising the status of women, and reducing child mortality rate.

3. Delay the onset of childbearing by five years and wider spacing of births.

The Human Population and Pollution

Intact ecosystems naturally prevent soil erosion, dispose of environmental wastes, provide fresh water, regulate climate. But as the human population increases in size, more ecosystems are impacted by humans. Ecosystems are no longer able to process and rid the biosphere of wastes and leads to problems for all living things, and also problems in the air, in the water, and on land.

Air pollutants in particular are involved in causing major environmental effects, including global warming, acid rain, and ozone depletion. These terms are used on the news all the time, so I thought I’d tell you a little about what that means.

FOSSIL FUELS

Problems with the use of fossil fuels such as coal and oil and gas include the fact that they are nonrenewable, they pollute the environment when they are burned, oil and gas wells pollute the environment by emitting greenhouse gases, and they are contributing to the problem of global warming. The trend for the future is the use of hydrogen for energy.

Hydrogen-based fuel cells are in use now in some cities to power vehicles, can be produced locally all over the world, and will reduce global warming and air pollution

Global Warming

One concern is that the world’s overall temperature, called the global climate will continue to warm at a rate ten times faster than any time in the past.

There is more carbon dioxide in the air from the burning of fossil fuels and the burning and clearing of forests to make way for farmland and pasture. The oceans are currently absorbing about one half of the carbon dioxide emitted, or else the increase would he much higher than this stated amount. In addition, methane gas is being given off by oil wells, rice paddies, and all sorts of organisms including domesticated cows, and this also contributes to global warming.

These gases are known as greenhouse gases because just like the panes of a greenhouse they allow the sun’s radiation to pass through but hinder the escape of heat. Actually, water is also a greenhouse gas because clouds do the same thing. If the earth’s temperature rises due to the greenhouse effect, more water will evaporate, forming more clouds, compounding the problem.

Predicted Consequences

Global warming will bring about climate changes, glaciers would melt, and sea levels will rise, evaporation will increase, and most likely there will be more rain along the coasts and dryer conditions inland. There will be more droughts inland, which will reduce crop yields and also cause trees to die off. Billions will have to be spent to keep coastal cities, like New York, Boston, and Miami from disappearing into the sea.

Acid Rain

Pure water has a pH of 7 but the small amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere combines with water to produce a weak acid. Therefore, we get rain with an acid pH. In addition, coal and oil that is burned will release sulfur dioxide into the air. The oil well fires started during the Persian Gulf War released much sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere. Automobile exhaust puts nitrogen oxides in the air. Both sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides are converted to acids when they combine with water vapor in the atmosphere. That gives the rain an even more acid pH.

When the soil absorbs this rain, it becomes acidic too, and it causes forests to die, and the waters cannot support normal fish populations.

The acid rain also corrodes marble, metal, and stonework, an effect that is noticeable in cities.

Ozone layer

Ozone is a naturally occurring substance that is supposed to stay up high in our atmosphere and absorbs the harmful ultraviolet radiation that tries to enter our planet. However, we are now getting ozone forming down lower where we breathe. The air pollutants from fossil fuels react with one another in the presence of sunlight to produce ozone.

Breathing ozone affects the respiratory and nervous systems, resulting in respiratory distress, headache, and exhaustion. These symptoms are particularly apt to appear in young people; therefore, in Los Angeles, where ozone levels are often high, schoolchildren must remain inside the school building. Ozone also damages plants.

Carbon monoxide from car exhaust blocks the hemoglobin in our blood from carrying oxygen. Breathing large quantities of automobile exhaust can even result in death because of this effect. Carbon monoxide is released into the air from the burning of tropical forests.

Normally, warm air near the ground escapes into the atmosphere. However smog keeps cold air at ground level beneath a layer of warm air above. This is particularly true of Los Angeles, and that’s why it’s called the “air pollution capital” of the United States.

Ozone Depletion: When the ozone in the upper part of our atmosphere becomes depleted, UV radiation impairs crop and tree growth and also kills plankton (microscopic plant and animal life) that sustain oceanic life. Without an adequate ozone shield, food sources and health are threatened. UV radiation also causes mutations that can lead to skin cancer, cataracts, and affect our immune system.

Pollution of Oceans

Pesticides and other chemicals get into the ground and water supply, and new plants absorb them, animals eat the plants, and humans eat the plants and the animals. In that way, our bodies pick up these toxins.

The oceans are the final receptors for water pollutants carried by rivers. Waste products that are dumped into areas that drain into the ocean can also be washed back to shores. The plastic piece that holds a six-pack of cans, gets tangled in birds, fishes, and marine mammals, causing their death.

Oil spills in the ocean kill plankton, fish, and shellfish, as well as birds and marine mammals. The largest tanker spill in U.S. territorial waters occurred on March 24, 1989, when the tanker Exxon Valdez struck a reef in Alaska and leaked 44 million liters of crude oil.

Soil Erosion, Desertification, and Deforestation

Soil Erosion

Wind and rain carry away about 25 billion tons of topsoil yearly, worldwide. If this rate of loss continues, the earth will lose practically all of its topsoil by the middle of the next century. This is compounded by increased use of fertilizers, pesticides, and fossil fuel energy. One solution is for farmers to use different cropping methods to control soil erosion.

Desertification the transformation of land to desert conditions because of overgrazing and over-farming. It is particularly a problem along the edge of the Sahara Desert in Africa, but occurs in the US as well.

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Deforestation

Removal of forests impacts the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the amount of fresh water available, and the retention of soil. Yet, a huge number of trees have been turned into paper and wood products. The animals that live in these forests have been displaced.

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Habitat loss is of most concern in tropical rain forests and coral reefs. Tropical rain forests are home to more wildlife than temperate forests.

For example, temperate forests across the entire United States contain about 400 tree species compared to 750 types of trees in the rain forests. There are about twice as many fish, frogs, and birds in a rain forest. A million species of plants and animals are in danger of disappearing within 20 years as a result of deforestation.

Many of these life-forms have never been studied, and yet they may be useful sources of food or medicines.

Logging occurs because people prefer furniture made from tropical woods. In Brazil, the government allows citizens to own any land they clear in the Amazon forest. Once the cleared land is incapable of sustaining crops, the farmers move on to another part of the rain forest. In the meantime, cattle ranchers move in and keep the area deforested.

Extinction

Hunting causes a lot of problems. Animals are being hunted on land and water for both pleasure and profit.

Another major cause of extinction is habitat destruction outright or by fragmentation into small pieces that cannot support the same species richness as before. By the year 2010, very little undisturbed rain forest will exist outside of national parks and other relatively small protected areas.

The accidental or purposeful introduction of new species into an ecosystem can cause the extinction of another species. The brown tree snake somehow slipped into Guam from the Pacific islands in the late 1940s. Since then, it has wiped out 9 of 11 native bird species, leaving the forests eerily quiet.

Pollution like pesticides has caused decreased predatory birds and amphibians. The loss of entire species will most likely be detrimental to humans since they depend on them for raw materials, food, medicines, and other things.

Natural Medicines

Great benefits can come from unlikely species. The Gila monster has deadly saliva, but it is useful at regulating insulin levels in diabetics. The vampire bat has substances in its salivary glands that prevent clotting, and are found to break up clots in stroke victims. The scorpion’s venom can seek out and destroy brain tumors. The puffer fish has poisonous spines but are effective in easing the pain of heroine withdrawal and cancer. The saliva of the leech can reduce the risk of blood clots during surgeries. The poisonous frog has deadly skin secretions, but is effective as a pain killer without being addictive.

Coral Reefs

Like a tropical forest, coral reefs are most likely sources of new medicines yet to be discovered. If we lose one species, we may be losing an important, life-saving medicine. Not only that, a reef serves as a storm barrier that protects the shoreline and provides a safe harbor for ships.

Reefs around the globe are being destroyed. Tons of soil from deforested tracts of land brings nutrients that stimulate the growth of all kinds of algae. This has contributed to population explosion of starfish that are devouring Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Reefs are also being damaged by pollutants that seep into the sea.

About 90 % of the coral reefs of the Philippines are dead or deteriorating due to over-fishing. The methods are sinister, including the use of dynamite to kill the fish, making it easier to scoop them up, and use of cyanide to stun the fish to capture them alive. The seaweed overgrows and kills the coral. It is estimated that we may lose 60% of all coral reefs in the next 50 years.

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