17. Earth's Carrying Capacity Flashcards

1
Q

Idea of CC

A

A closed ecosystem has a set amount of resources and can only support so much of life.

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2
Q

What’s the Easter Island Metaphor?

A

Civilization crashed.
Melaneshians colonized ~1000 AD, by the time the Dutch came in 1700s it was barren.
The forest and resources were depleted, exceeding the carrying capacity.

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3
Q

What is the concept of spaceship Earth?

A

In the 1960s the human perception changed due to the spaceship mission.
We realized Earth isn’t a limitless supply of resources.
Can’t exploit Earth.

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4
Q

What does the ecological footprint measure?

A

Measures the demand of human activity on the biosphere.

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5
Q

What is biocapacity?

A

The amount of productive area that’s available to generate resources and absorb waste.
We want to increase this.

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6
Q

What is a global hectare?

A

It expresses ecological footprint and biocapacity with the same currency.
Weigh them by their productivity.

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7
Q

What are the assumptions for the ecological footprint?

A
  1. Resources people consume and the wastes they generate can be quantified and tracked.
  2. Resource and waste flows can be measured in terms of the biologically productive area necessary to maintain them.
  3. The global hectare (gha) can be calculated for different land use types.
  4. Because a single global hectare represents a single use of a particular resource, and each global hectare represents the same amount of bioproductivity, ghas can be summed to obtain an aggregate measure of the ecological footprint or biocapacity.
  5. Human demand, expressed as the ecological footprint, can be directly compared to biocapacity in global hectares, and can be directly compared to biocapacity at different spatial scales (local, regional, global)
  6. Area demanded can exceed area supplied if demand on an ecosystem exceeds that ecosystems regenerative capacity.
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8
Q

What is the ecological footprint equation?

A

EFc=EFp+EFi-EFe

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9
Q

What is EFc?

A

Consumption.

We want to know how much a region consumes.

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10
Q

What is EFp?

A

Production. Resources in an area being produced and harvested.

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11
Q

What is EFi?

A

Imported

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12
Q

What is EFe?

A

Exported

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13
Q

What is the ecological footprint of production?

A

EFp=(P/Yn)YFEQF

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14
Q

What is the biocapacity equation?

A

BC=AYFEQF

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15
Q

What is A?

A

Area available for a given area.

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16
Q

What is YF?

A

A Ratio of national to world average yields

17
Q

What is EQF?

A

The equivalent factors

Weights the area of specific land use type to gha

18
Q

What are the limitations of the EP concept?

A

Doesn’t account for:
1. availability/depletion of non-renewable resources
2. Inherently unsustainable activities
– Heavy metals, radioactivity, etc cannot be assimilated
3. Environmental management and harvest practices
– Origin or method of extraction of a resource in a particular place are not accounted for
4. Land and ecosystem degradation
– Doesn’t measure variables that contribute to determining yields – eg. soil structure, nutrient availability, so cannot predict future BC
5. Ecosystem disturbance/resiliency of ecosystems
– Only evaluates the consequences of changes to the ecosystem that affect yield
6. Use/contamination of fresh water
– Difficult to determine biocapacity for hydrological cycles.

19
Q

What is the Global Ecological Footprint in 2007?

A

18 billion gha

2.7 gha/person

20
Q

What is the global biocapacity in 2007?

A
  1. 9 billion gha

1. 8 gha/person

21
Q

Did we cross Earth’s carrying capacity?

A

Yes, in 1970-80s

22
Q

Debtors

A

EP>BC

Like US, China and Europe