Essential environmental science

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Essential environmental science

Edward A. Keller, Daniel B. Botkin

John Wiley, c2008

  • : [pbk.]

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Includes bibliographical references (p. 417-432) and index

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内容説明・目次

内容説明

Essential Environmental Science provides a non-quantitative approach that is based on principles, critical thinking and the big questions that are driving the field today. It offers a condensed look at the field, covering topics in way that will help readers answer the "big questions." It eliminates more detailed or advanced topics to make the material more accessible while also placing the focus on today's important issues.

目次

Chapter 1. Fundamental Issues in Environmental Science. Big Question: Why is Science Necessary to Solve Environmental Problems? Case Study: Easter Island. 1.1 Fundamental Principles. 1.2 Human Population: The Basic Environmental Problem. 1.3 Sustainability. Earth's Carrying Capacity. 1.4 A Global Perspective. 1.5 Cities Affect the Environment. 1.6 People and Nature. 1.7 Science and Values. 1.8 Solving Many Environmental Problems Involves Systems and Rates of Change. Environmental Unity. Changes and Equilibriums in Systems. Biota: Biosphere and Sustaining Life Characteristics of Environmental Systems That Make Solving Environmental Problems Harder. 1.9 The Precautionary Principle: When in Doubt, Play It Safe. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Chapter 2. Human Population Growth. Big Question: Why is it the Underlying Environmental Problem? Case Study: How the Great Tsunami of 2004 Affected the Human Population. 2.1 How Populations Change Over Time: Basic Concepts of Population Dynamics. The Prophecy of Malthus. 2.2 Population Growth. How Many People Have Lived on Earth? 2.3 The Logistic Growth Curve. 2.4 Other Clues to How Our Population May Change. Age Structure. The Demographic Transition. Human Death Rates and the Rise of Industrial Societies. Longevity and Its Effect on Population Growth. Life Expectancy. 2.5 Limiting Factors. The Quality of Life and the Human Carrying Capacity of Earth. 2.6 How Can We Achieve Zero Population Growth? 2.7 How Many People Can Earth Support? Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 3. Biogeochemical Cycles. Big Question: Why Are Biogeochemical Cycles Essential to Long Term Life on Earth? Case Study: Lake Washington. 3.1 How Chemicals Cycle. Biogeochemical Cycles. Chemical Reactions. 3.2 Environmental Questions and Biogeochemical Cycles. Biological Questions. Geologic Questions. Atmospheric Questions. Hydrologic Questions. 3.3 Biogeochemical Cycles and Life: Limiting Factors. 3.4 General Concepts Central to Biogeochemical Cycles. 3.5 The Geologic Cycle. The Tectonic Cycle. The Hydrologic Cycle. The Rock Cycle. 3.6 Biogeochemical Cycling in Ecosystems. Ecosystem Cycles of a Metal and a Nonmetal. Chemical Cycling and the "Balance of Nature". 3.7 Some Major Global Chemical Cycles. The Carbon Cycle. The Missing Carbon Sink. The Nitrogen Cycle. The Phosphorus Cycle. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 4. Ecosystems. Big Question: What is Necessary to Sustain Life on Earth? Case Study: The Acorn Connection. 4.1 How Populations Change Over Time and Interact with Each Other. 4.2 Professions and Places: The Ecological Niche and the Habitat. Measuring Niches. 4.3 The Competitive Exclusion Principle. 4.4 How Species Coexist. 4.5 Symbiosis. 4.6 The Community Effect. 4.7 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth. 4.8 Basic Characteristics of Ecosystems. 4.9 Food Webs. 4.10 Ecosystem Energy Flow. Life and the Laws of Thermodynamics. Producing New Organic Matter. Practical Implication I: Human Domination of Ecosystems. Practical Implication II: Ecosystem Management. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 5. Biological Diversity. Big Question: Can We Save Endangered Species and Keep Biological Diversity High? Case Study: The Shrinking Mississippi Delta. 5.1 What is Biological Diversity? 5.2 Biological Evolution. Mutation. Natural Selection. Migration. Genetic Drift. Biological Evolution in Action Today: Mosquitoes and the Malaria Parasite. 5.3 Ecology. 5.4 Basic Concepts of Biological Diversity. 5.5 The Number of Species on Earth. 5.6 Why Are There Many Species in Some Places and Not in Others? 5.7 What Can We Do to Save Endangered Species? 5.8 Why Save Endangered Species? 5.9 How a Species Becomes Endangered and Extinct. 5.10 Causes of Mass Extinction. 5.11 How People Cause Extinctions and Affect Biological Diversity. 5.12 The Good News: The Status of Some Species Has Improved. 5.13 Can a Species Be Too Abundant? If So, What Should We Do? 5.14 The Kirkland's Warbler and Environmental Change. 5.15 Ecological Islands and Endangered Species. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 6. Restoration Ecology. Big Question: Can We Restore Damaged Ecosystems? Case Study: Restoring a Ponderosa Forest. 6.1 Restoration Ecology. 6.2 How Nature Restores Itself. Patterns in Succession. Dune Succession. Bog Succession. Old-Field Succession. General Patterns of Succession. 6.3 During Succession, Does One Species Prepare the Way for Another? Life-History Differences. Chronic Patchiness. Other Changes During Succession. 6.4 Can Nature Ever Be Constant? 6.5 Examples of Restoration. Steps in Ecological Restoration: Planning. Prairie Restoration. Restoration of the Florida Everglades. Restoration of California's Channel Islands and Their Strange Island Foxes. Restoring Land Damaged by Lead Mines in England. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 7. Forests and Wildlife. Big Question: Can We Have Them and Use Them Too? Case Study: Trying to Save a Small Owl From Extinction. 7.1 Keeping Our Living Resources Alive. 7.2 Modern Conflicts Over Forestland and Forest Resources. 7.3 A Modern Forester's View of a Forest. The Famous Hubbard Brook Experiment. 7.4 Clear-Cutting That Really Did Not Work: The Sad Story of Michigan's Stump Barrens. 7.5 Are There Other Ways to Harvest Trees. 7.6 International Aspects of Forestry. 7.7 Plantation Forestry. 7.8 Are the World's Forests Shrinking, Growing, or Neither? 7.9 Indirect Deforestation. 7.10 Traditional Wildlife Management. Bison on the Range and Then Mostly Off the Range. Pribilof Island Reindeer. 7.11 Improved Approaches to Wildlife Management. Time Series and Historical Range of Variation. Age Structure as Useful Information. 7.12 Managing Two or More Species at a Time: Do Predators Matter? Return to the Big Question. Summary. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 8. Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology. Big Question: Why Are Even Tiny Amounts of Pollutants a Major Concern? Case Study: Demasculinization and Feminization of Frogs in the Environment. 8.1 Some Basics. Terminology. How We Measure the Amount of Pollution. 8.2 Categories of Pollutants. Infectious Agents. Toxic Heavy Metals. Toxic Pathways. Mercury and Minimata Japan. Lead and the Urban Environment. Organic Compounds. Hormonally Active Agents. Thermal Pollution. Particulates. Electromagnetic Fields. Noise Pollution. Voluntary Exposure. 8.3 General Effects of Pollutants. Dose and Response. Threshold Effects. Ecological Gradients. Tolerance. Acute and Chronic Effects. 8.4 Risk Assessment and Risk Management. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 9. Agriculture and Environment. Big Question: Can We Feed the World Without Destroying the Environment? Case Study: Clean-Water Farms. 9.1 How Agriculture Changes the Environment. 9.2 Dust Bowls and Our Eroding Soils. 9.3 Where Eroded Soil Goes. 9.4 Making Soils Sustainable. 9.5 Farm Pests. 9.6 How Much Pesticide Do We Release Into the Environment? And Where Does It Go? 9.7 The Search for a Magic Bullet. DDT. 9.8 Ecological Approaches to Pest Control. Integrated Pest Management. 9.9 Hybrids and Genetic Modification: Creating Better Crops. Biotech Comes to the Farm. Bioteching New Hybrids. The Terminator Gene. Transfer of Genes from One Form of Life to Another. 9.10 Grazing on Rangelands: An Environmental Benefit or Problem? Traditional and Industrialized Use of Grazing Lands and Rangelands. The Geography of Agricultural Animals. How Many Grazing Animals Can the Land Support. 9.11 Organic Farming. 9.12 Deserts: What Are They and What Causes Them? Preventing Desertification. 9.13 Does Farming Change the Biosphere? Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 10. Energy and Environment. Big Question: Can We Assure a Sustainable Supply of Energy? Case Study: Winds of Change in Iowa. 10.1 World Energy Supply and Use. 10.2 Energy and Work. 10.3 Types of Fuels. 10.4 Petroleum Products: Oil and Natural Gas. Oil. Natural Gas. 10.5 Coal. 10.6 The Environmental Effects of Extracting, Delivering, and Burning Coal. Strip Mining. Underground Mining. The Trouble With Coal. 10.7 Environmental Effects of Extracting, Delivering, and Using Petroleum Products. 10.8 Three Basic Alternatives to Fossil Fuels: Solar, Geothermal, and Nuclear Energy. 10.9 Solar Energy: Two Types. Passive Solar Energy. Active Solar Energy Systems. Environmental Effects of Using Solar Energy. The Future of Solar Energy. Alternative Energy Sources: Bavaria Lights the Way. 10.10 Wind Power. 10.11 Water Power. Water Power and the Environment. Tidal Power: Another Kind of Water Power. 10.12 Biomass Energy. Sources of Biomass Energy. Biomass Energy and the Environment. 10.13 Geothermal Energy. 10.14 Nuclear Energy. Nonbreeder Reactors: Fission Reactors. Breeder Reactors. Fusion Reactors. 10.15 Environmental Problems of Nuclear Power. Three Mile Island: A Cooling Failure Leads to a Meltdown. Chernobyl. Some Facts You Should Know About Radioactivity. 10.16 How Are We Dealing with These Problems Today? Radiation and Health. Radioactive-Waste Management. 10.17 Energy: Storing It, Transporting It, Conserving It. Storing Energy. Transporting Energy. Conserving Energy by Using It More Efficiently. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 11. Water and Environment. Big Question: Can We Maintain Our Water Resources for Future Generations? Case Study: The Colorado River: Water Resources Management, Water Pollution, and the Environment. 11.1 Water. A Brief Global Perspective. Water Sources. Desalination. 11.2 Water Supply. 11.3 Off-Stream and In-Stream Use. Transport of Water. Some Trends in Water Use. 11.4 Water Conservation. Agricultural Use. Domestic Use. Industry and Manufacturing Use. Perception and Water Use. 11.5 Sustainability and Water Management. Sustainable Water Use. Water Management and the Environment. 11.6 Wetlands. Preserving and Restoring Wetlands. 11.7 Dams and the Environment. 11.8 Channelization and the Environment. Kissimmee River, Florida: A Case Study of Problems with Channelization. 11.9 Flooding. Urbanization and Flooding. 11.10 Global Water Shortage Linked to Food Supply. 11.11 Water Pollution. 11.12 Sources of Pollution. Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD). Waterborne Disease. Fecal Coliform Bacteria. Nutrients. Eutrophication. Oil. Sediment. Acid Mine Drainage. 11.13 Surface Water Pollution. 11.14 Groundwater Pollution. Principles of Groundwater Pollution: An Example. Another Example: Long Island, New York. 11.15 Water Treatment. 11.16 Wastewater Treatment. Septic-Tank Disposal Systems. Treatment Plants. Boston Harbor: Cleaning up a National Treasure. Land Application of Wastewater: An Old Practice Made Cleaner. Reuse of Treated Wastewater. 11.7 Water Pollution and Environmental Law. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 12. Oceans and Environment. Big Question: Can We Learn to Manage the Oceans' Resources? Case Study: Shrimp, Mangroves, and Pickup Trucks. 12.1 Lots of Fish in the Sea: World Fish Production. 12.2 The World's Fisheries Are in Trouble: The Decline of Fish Populations. 12.3 An Ocean is Many Habitats and Ecosystems. 12.4 Ocean Currents. 12.5 Where Are the Fish? 12.6 Salmon, Anchovies, and Upwellins. 12.7 Coral Reefs: A Special Problem. 12.8 We Pollute the Oceans Too, Which Gets Fish in Trouble. Plastics in the Ocean. 12.9 Can We Make Ocean Fisheries Sustainable? Marine Sanctuaries. Aquaculture and Mariculture. 12.10 Conservation of Whales and Other Marine Mammals. Dolphins and Other Small Whales. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 13. Earth's Atmosphere and Climate. Big Question: Global Warming is Happening: What Part Do We Play? Case Study: Global Warming and the Polar Bears of Hudson Bay. 13.1 Is the Global Temperature Rising? 13.2 What Causes Climate Change of Any Sort, and What Is Making It Get Warmer? Variation in the Sun's Energy May Be One Reason for Climate Changes. Milankovich Cycles Are Another Possible Explanation. Volcanoes Can Alter Climate. Dust from Our Own Activities Also Cools the Climate. Variations in Ocean Currents May Affect the Climate. El Nino: A Special Climate Phenomenon Linked to Ocean Currents. 13.3 What Is the Greenhouse Effect, and How Does It Warm Earth's Surface? 13.4 Greenhouse Gases Are Increasing, and We Are Part of the Reason. Carbon Dioxide. Methane. Chlorofluorocarbons. Nitrous Oxide. Ozone. 13.5 Would It Really Be So Serious if Earth Warmed Up a Bit? What Will Be the Effects of a Rising Sea Level? How Will Global Warming Affect the World's Climate? Agriculture. Lowering of Water Tables and Reservoirs Could Cause Serious Shortages. Biological and Ecological Changes. Migration of Species Can Spread Diseases. Endangered Species. 13.6 Can We Do Anything to Slow the Temperature Rise? What Has Been Done So Far to Mitigate Global Warming? 13.7 Can We Do Anything to Alleviate the Effects of Global Warming? Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 14. Air Pollution and Environment. Big Question: Why is Air Pollution in Cities Still Such a Big Problem? Case Study: An Olympic Success Story. 14.1 A Brief History of Air Pollution. 14.2 General Effects of Air Pollution. 14.3 Primary and Secondary Pollutants, Natural and Human. 14.4 Major Air Pollutants: Where Do They Come From and What Do They Do? Sulfur Dioxide. Nitrogen Oxides. Carbon Monoxide (CO). Ozone. Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs). Particulate Matter. Hydrogen Sulfide. Hydrogen Fluoride. Other Hazardous Gases. Lead. 14.5 Urban Air Pollution. Reducing Urban Air Pollution At Its Source. Automobiles. 14.6 Acid Rain. Control of Acid Rain. 14.7 Ozone Depletion in the Stratosphere. Reducing Ozone Depletion: An Environmental Success Story. 14.8 Indoor Air Pollution. Sources and Concentrations of Indoor Air Pollution. Sick Buildings. Symptoms of Indoor Air Pollution. Two Particularly Important Indoor Pollutants. Controlling Indoor Air Pollution. 14.9 Air Pollution Legislation, Standards, and Index of Air Quality. Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. Ambient Air Quality Standards. Air Quality Index (AQI). 14.10 The Cost of Reducing Air Pollution. 14.11 What Lies Ahead for Air Pollution? Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 15. Minerals and Environment. Big Question: Is It Possible to Use Nonrenewable Mineral Resources Sustainably? Case Study: Fossil Trace Golf Club, a Story of Successful Mine Reclamation. 15.1 The Importance of Minerals to Society. 15.2 How Mineral Deposits Are Formed. Distribution of Mineral Resources. Plate Boundaries. Igneous Processes. Sedimentary Processes. Biological Processes. Weathering Processes. 15.3 Resources and Reserves. 15.4 Use and Availability of Mineral Resources. Availability of Mineral Resources. Mineral Consumption. U.S. Supply of Minerals. 15.5 Impacts of Mineral Development. Environmental Impacts. Social Impacts. 15.6 Minimizing Environmental Impacts of Mineral Development. Recycling. 15.7 Minerals and Sustainability. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 16. Waste Management. Big Question: Is Zero Waste Possible? Case Study: New York City's Zero Waste Campaign. 16.1 What Is This Waste We Are Talking About? Composition of Solid Waste. 16.2 Early Concepts of Waste Disposal. 16.3 Modern Trends. 16.4 Integrated Waste Management. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. Markets for Recycled Products. Recycling Human Waste. 16.5 Materials Management. 16.6 Solid-Waste Management. On-Site Disposal. Composting. Incineration. Open Dumps. Municipal Solid Waste. 16.7 Hazardous Waste. 16.8 Hazardous-Waste Legislation. Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA). Other Legislation. 16.9 Hazardous-Waste Management: Land Disposal. Secure Landfill. Land Application: Microbial Breakdown. Surface Impoundment. Deep-Well Disposal. Summary of Land Disposal Methods. 16.10 Alternatives to Land Disposal of Hazardous Waste. 16.11 Pollution Prevention. Case History: Waste Disposal at a Cheese Company. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 17. Natural Hazards. Big Question: Why are More of Them Becoming Disasters and Catastrophes? Case Study: La Conchita Landslide, 2005. 17.1 Hazards, Disasters, and Catastrophes. Taking a Historical Point of View. Fundamental Concepts Related to Natural Hazards. Nature Can Play a Dual Role, Performing Natural Service Functions and Posing Hazards. 17.2 Natural Hazards Are Predictable. 17.3 Linkages Between Hazards and Between the Physical and Biological Environments. 17.4 Hazards That Used to Produce Disasters Now Produce Catastrophes. Land Transformation and Natural Hazards. Hurricane Katrina: One of the Worst Natural Catastrophes in U.S. History. 17.5 Risk from Hazards Can Be Estimated? 17.6 Adverse Effects of Hazards Can Be Minimized. Active vs. Reactive Response. Impact and Recovery from Disasters and Catastrophes. Perceiving, Avoiding, and Adjusting to Hazards. 17.7 What Does the Future Hold with Respect to Disasters and Catastrophes? Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 18. Environmental Economics. Big Question: Can We Put a Price on Scenic Beauty, Endangered Species, and the Quality of Life? Case Study: We Can Easily Find Out the Price of Salmon On The Table, But What Is the Economic Value of Salmon Swimming In a River? 18.1 Some Environmental Dollar Values. 18.2 The Environment as a Commons. 18.3 Low Growth Rate and Therefore Low Profit as a Factor in Exploitation. 18.4 Externalities: Costs that Don't Show Up in the Price Tag. 18.5 Natural Capital, Environmental Intangibles, and Ecosystem Services. Valuing the Beauty of Nature. 18.6 How is the Future Valued? 18.7 Risk-Benefit Analysis. Acceptability of Risks and Costs. 18.8 Global Issues: Who Bears the Cost? 18.9 Environmental Policy Instruments. Pollution Control and the Law of Diminishing Returns. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading. Chapter 19. Planning for a Sustainable Future. Big Question: Can We Plan and Achieve a Sustainable Environment? 19.1 The Ideal Sustainable Environment. 19.2 The Process of Planning a Future. 19.3 In Planning a Nation's Landscapes, How Big Should Wildlands Be? 19.4 Our Need for Nature in an Increasingly Urban Environment. The City Park. The Ecological Capital of Brazil: How a City Transformed Itself. 19.5 Regional Planning: The Tennessee Valley Authority. 19.6 Environment and Law: A Horse, a Gun, and a Plan. Three Stages in the History of Federal Legislation Pertaining to Land and Natural Resources. 19.7 Skiing at Mineral King Raised a Question: Does Private Enterprise Belong On Public Lands? 19.8 How You Can Play a Role in Legal Processes. 19.9 International Environmental Law and Diplomacy. 19.10 The Challenge to Students of the Environment. Return to the Big Question. Summary. Key Terms. Getting It Straight. What Do You Think? Pulling It All Together. Further Reading.

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詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BA8580168X
  • ISBN
    • 9780471704119
  • LCCN
    2007033352
  • 出版国コード
    us
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Hoboken, N.J.
  • ページ数/冊数
    xxvi, 454 p.
  • 大きさ
    28 cm
  • 分類
  • 件名
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