p7 Flashcards
The UN has described the world’s forests as
‘fundamental’ to human well-being and survival.
- Over 1.6 billion people depend on forests and over 90 per cent of these are the poorest in societies.
- Forests, like other ecosystems, are essential for human wellbeing through their ‘services’, as summarised in Table 6.1, as well as being the source of 80 per cent of global biodiversity.
- Deforestation affected an estimated 13 million hectares of forests per year between 2000 and 2010.
- However, net loss was reduced because of afforestation.
- Figure 6.5 (page 116) depicts a model often used in geographical studies: the environmental Kuznets curve.
- This suggests societies reach a tipping point where exploitation changes to more protection.
Factors affecting the timing of this attitudinal change are:
- the wealth of countries
- the rising knowledge of the role the environment plays in human well-being
- the aid given to poorer nations to help choices over exploitation
- the political systems and enforcement of environmental laws
- the participation of locals
- the power of TNCs.
the environmental Kuznets curve
Forests, like other ecosystems, are essential for human wellbeing through their ‘services’,
deforestation rates
- Between 1990 and 2015 the rate of net global deforestation slowed down by more than 50 per cent and total forest carbon emissions decreased by over 25 per cent according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN (FAO).
- Increased sustainable management will hopefully result in greater reductions in carbon emissions from forests.
- Thirteen per cent of forests - 524 million hectares - are now classed as ‘conserved’.
- Brazil and the USA have the largest National Parks and Forest Reserves.
- Europe, North and Central America have large tracts that have been protected for over a century, with recent increases in Asia and Africa.
- Protective legislation has been combined with a greater involvement of local communities in planning and in developing policies, which is critical for long-term successful reductions in forest loss.
- Forest product extraction technology is improving, and carbon sequestration projects are increasing.
- However, such designation does not always mean conservation in practice.
Attitudes and players
Human well-being can be enhanced through a more sustainable interaction with ecosystems. The support of different players, especially governments and NGOs, is important. However, players may have different attitudes: economic, social, political and environmental.
Sustainable management:
The environmentally appropriate, socially beneficial and economically viable use of ecosystems for present and future generations.
Uk forest
- Following centuries of exploitation, forest cover in the UK had dropped from 80 to under ten per cent by the end of the nineteenth century.
- The Forestry Commission planted fast-growing exotic conifers such as Sitka Spruce on the moors of Wales, the Scottish Highlands and Lake District.
- Forest cover increased by 25 per cent between 1870 and 1947, and by 50 per cent between 1948 and 1995.
- By 2016, thirteen per cent of the UK was forested, with increasing numbers of indigenous species planted.
Impacts of rising temperatures
lobal warming is increasing temperatures globally, and since warmer air affects evaporation and stores more water, the amount of water in the atmosphere will increase. As a result, rain dropped during individual storms can increase, resulting in flash floods.
This specification requires you to know about the uncertainty of global projections and three specific implications for:
This specification requires you to know about the uncertainty of global projections and three specific implications for:
- precipitation patterns
- river regimes
- cryosphere and drainage basin water stores.
Key concept: The Arctic water cycle
The Arctic plays a large role in global climate as its sea ice regulates evaporation and precipitation. The Arctic carbon cycle is very sensitive to climate change, making future projections difficult.
the arctic p1
- Earth’s cryosphere has already been affected by global warming.
- Over the last twenty years the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets have been losing mass; most glaciers have continued to shrink, and Arctic sea ice and northern hemisphere spring snow cover have continued to decrease in extent and thickness (Figure 6.6).
- The Arctic is an early warning system for the rest of the planet, acting as a barometer of the environmental impacts resulting from fossil fuel climate forcing.
- In the past few decades average Arctic temperatures have risen twice as fast as global averages: three to four degrees in Alaska and north-west Canada.
- They could soon rise another three to four degrees over land, and up to seven degrees over the oceans.
- There are huge implications for ocean currents, air circulation, sea level rise and flooding beyond the region.
- As a net sink, the Arctic stores far more carbon than any other region, with five to fourteen per cent of total oceanic stores, but it is also more vulnerable to global warming.
- Amplified atmospheric warming over the Arctic Ocean in autumn is already evident, with varying predicted effects as shown in Table 6.2.
the arctic p2
- In the short term an increase in CO, uptake is predicted, but with further sea-ice loss, increases in marine plants such as phytoplankton may cause a limited net increase in the uptake of CO, by Arctic surface waters.
- In the long term, a net outward flux of carbon is expected because of rivers bringing carbon from melted permafrost stores, and loss of methane hydrate from destabilised sea floor deposits stored for thousands of years.
- Carbon uptake by terrestrial plants is increasing because of longer growing seasons and also the slow northward migration of boreal forests.
- There is a high risk of irreversible feedback, called runaway global warming.
- Figure 6.10 on page 122 shows such feedback loops.
- There are two types of positive climate feedbacks in the Arctic from rising temperatures: sea-ice loss and carbon feedbacks.
Arctic barometer:
A barometer measures pressure. The Arctic is already showing pressure on its natural systems from anthropogenic influences.
Effects of global warming on the artic and beyond
Effects on the water cycle
- Warm water flowing into the Arctic from the Pacific and Atlantic
- Rising local air temperatures
- Shrinkage of sea ice; the Arctic ice cap averages only 3 m thick and melting is increasing faster than anticipated
- Run-off of fresh, cold water, which will alter marine ecosystems and the food chains dependent on the saline waters; this is predicted to affect areas outside the Arctic Ocean by 2100
- Funnelling of more cold water into the oceanic conveyer belt