Ideas, Interests, Institutions and Instruments
Environmental Concern & Jobs vs Environment
Stakeholders & their power, Governments captive by industry, future generations
Jurisdiction, Governance, treaties, colonialism (What we use to make decisions)
Regulations & taxes/fees, subsidies and indecentives, decision making tools (EIA, modelling) (what we do)
Science, government, values & ideas, politics & interests & power, scale & jurisdiction, uncertainty risk & complication, technology
Studying, developing new buildings and parking, getting to and from campus and eating
New knowledge & Ideas, graduates from envrionmental programs
Energy consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, impacts natural landscape, waste of natural resources, release of toxic chemicals, new buildings
Campus & environmental policy, landscape natural areas planning, energy conservation programs, waste management programs
Full of values, ideas and expectations. hold government institutions and technology like buildings, roads and cars
power and politics of an area
Growing population, agriculutre land development, people prefer suburban living
Protect biodiversity, cool city streets, manage stormwater
Dont fit in easily with the landscape, highly managed ecosystem and high maintenance
Adding in supply of something (roads) leads to increased consumption of that thing (more driving)
dynamic
Structuon & functions and the flow of nutrients throughout them
Focus on boundaries, population densities and population dynamic (population= group of same species)
Many populations of species living in the same space. focus on components, structure and function
Species exist within the tolerance limits for different environmental factors
A specific factor that affects the distribution of a species
Species with a broad range of tolerance
A species with a limited range of tolerance
Widely found species that act as early warnings of environmental change (ex. coral, moss, etc)
Species present, habitat, biological interactions and disturbances
Any species that acts as a biological indicator of the health of an environment
Any species that provides quantitative information about the environment and provides data that can be used in analysis
Often introduced by humans, can outcompete native species and can alter the structure of the natural ecosystem
A community that develops and resists further change
Communities never reach a stable climax becaude they are adapted to periodic distribution
The hypothesis that species diversity is highest when disturbance is neither too frequent or too rare
Cause impacts like biodiversity loss, pollution, climate change and shift ecosystem structure and function
Restoring disturbed systems through human intervention
sun
Inputs and outputs
1. Energy is neither created or destroyed, it only changes form
2. Quality of energy degrades with time and use
Intense, concentrated and high in temperature (ex. energy in gasoline and high voltage electricity)
Diffused, dispersed and low in temperature
Photosynthesis
~10%
An indication of the rate of solar energy conversion to higher quality stored chemical potential energy
75%
Snow and ice
97.5%
69% agriculture
19% Industrial
12% municipal
Water not returned to the system
Made up of inorganic elements and certain metals (the worst pollutant)
Pollutants that and formed and emitted from a particular source
Pollutants formed in the lower atmosphere through chemical reactions
Requires power and used physical and chemical methods to collect pollutant samples
Active method that continuously monitors data
No power required, collection is controlled by diffusion and deposition
A course of action adopted by a government or organization that relates to protecting the natural environment
Certain gases in the atmosphere trap the suns heat near the Earths surface
A measure of the change in Earths energy balance
The total volume of freshwater used to produce a product or service
