HUMAN IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT
LIFE SCIENCES
STUDY GUIDES AND NOTES
GRADE 12
Organisms interact with other organisms and with the environment. When we, as humans, interact with the environment to satisfy our needs, we may have many negative impacts on the environment through our activities. We may pollute the land, the water and the atmosphere. We also make demands on the earth to ensure our food security. In doing all of this we may impact negatively on the biodiversity of our planet.
Climate refers to the long-term weather conditions of an area. The atmosphere is made up of nitrogen, oxygen and other gases, which include the greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. Greenhouse gases absorb infrared (long wave radiation) long wave radiation emitted from the Earth and prevent it from escaping back into the atmosphere. This is known as the ‘greenhouse effect’.
The greenhouse effect is important in keeping the Earth warm so that it can sustain life. However, an increase in the concentration of greenhouse gases leads to the ‘enhanced greenhouse effect’. As a result, there may be a significant rise in the average temperature of the surface of the Earth over a period of time. This is known as ‘global warming’.
Increased concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is due mainly to:
Increased concentration of the methane in the atmosphere is due mainly to:
Increased temperatures may lead to:
Carbon footprint
This is a measure of the total amount of carbon dioxide emissions of an individual, a defined population or a company per year.
Strategies to reduce the carbon footprint include the following:
Destruction of the ozone layer
Ozone is a greenhouse gas that is found at low concentrations 15 - 50 km above the Earth’s surface. It absorbs the ultraviolet rays from the sun. The ultraviolet rays damage the DNA and cause skin cancer. Measurements in certain areas have shown a significant decrease in the amount of ozone layer. The damage to the ozone layer is caused mainly by chemicals called CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons), released by refrigerators, aerosol sprays and fast-food packaging.
If the measures to reduce the destruction of ozone layer fail:
Questions
1. Figure 11.1 below shows the averages of carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere since January 2009, as measured at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii.
Figure 11.1: Average carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere since January 2009, at Mauna in Hawaii
1.1 Describe how deforestation could lead to an increase in the carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere. (2)
1.2 Mention ONE human activity that might have led to the increase in carbon dioxide concentration as seen in the graph. (1)
1.3 What was the carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere in July 2012? (2)
1.4 What is the dependent variable in this investigation? (1)
1.5 Explain how the excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could lead to climate change. (4)
1.6 Mention ONE way in which humans can reduce the amount of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere. (1) [11]
Answers to activity 1
1.
1.1 Cutting down of trees decreases the amount of carbon dioxide✔ taken up by the plants during photosynthesis✔ (2)
1.2 Burning of fossil fuels✔ (1)
1.3 393,5✔ ppm✔ (2)
1.4 Carbon dioxide concentration in ppm✔ (1)
Answers to activity 1 (continued)
1.5
1.6
Questions
1. An investigation to measure the ozone concentration and the chlorine levels has been done in Antarctica since 1950 and the results are shown in the graph below:
1.1 Give a caption for the graph. (2)
1.2 What is the relationship between the levels of chlorine and the concentration of ozone? (2)
1.3 Name the dependent variable(s) in the investigation. (2)
1.4 In which 10-year period was the ozone depletion the greatest? (1)
1.5 In 1987 the Montreal Protocol was signed to lay down targets to reduce the use of CFCs by countries. Give TWO reasons why, despite a reduction in the use of CFCs, there was still a decline in the ozone layer. (2)
1.6 Name ONE item that humans were using which contained CFCs. (1)
1.7 Explain why the ozone layer is important for humans. (2) [12]
1.
1.1 Changes in the levels of chlorine and ozone concentration✔ from 1950 to 1990✔ (2)
1.2 An increase in the level of chlorine ✔leads to a decrease in the ozone concentration✔ (2)
1.3
1.4 Between 1970 and 1980✔ (1)
1.5
1.6
1.7 The ozone layer provides protection against ultraviolet rays✔, thus reducing the chances of getting skin cancer✔ (2) [12]
It is estimated that as many as 2 billion people won’t have sufficient access to clean water by 2050. This figure is expected to rise to 3.2 billion by 2080 — almost three times the number of people who now do without water. There are many efforts directed towards making good quality water available.
11.2.1 Availability of water
The availability of water may be influenced by the following factors:
Construction of Dams
Destruction of wetlands
Water wastage
Cost of water
Poor farming practices
Droughts and floods
Boreholes and their effect on aquifers
Water recycling
Exotic plantations and the depletion of the water table
11.2.2 Quality of water
The quality of water may be influenced by the following factors:
Eutrophication and algal bloom
Thermal pollution
Pollution of water through domestic, agricultural and industrial use
Mining
Alien Plants
Water purification
Questions
1. A group of learners conducted an investigation to determine the average amount of water used by a household for different purposes. They collected data on water-use from 5 families in their neighbourhood. The results are shown below.
Purpose for which water is used | Average amount of water used (%) |
Toilet flushing | 30 |
Baths and showers | 25 |
Gardening | 15 |
Washing clothes and dishes | 20 |
Cooking and drinking water | 10 |
1.1 Identify the:
a) Dependent variable (1)
b) Independent variable (1)
1.2 State TWO ways in which the reliability of the results can be improved. (2)
1.3 Draw a pie-chart to represent the data in the table. Show all calculations. (7)
1.4 Describe ONE advantage of making the results of the survey available to the various households that participated. (2) [13]
1.1
a) Average amount of water used✔ (1)
b) Purpose for which water is used✔ (1)
1.2
1.3 Calculations for proportions of slices in the pie-chart
Purpose for which water was used | Working | Proportion (degrees) |
Toilet flushing | 30 | 108 |
Baths and showers | 25 | 90 |
Gardening | 15 | 54 |
Washing clothes and dishes | 20 | 72 |
Cooking and drinking water | 10 | 36 |
Average amount of water used by a household for different purposes
(7)
1.4 Owners can identify the areas of greatest water use✔ to allow them to then develop strategies to reduce water use in that area✔ (2) [13]
Questions
1. Describe how alien plants may reduce both the availability and quality of water. (4)
2. Describe how poor farming practices may reduce both the availability and quality of water. (4) [8]
Questions
1. Read the article below entitled ‘Durban to Recycle Sewage water into Drinking Water’.
1.1 List FIVE different strategies referred to in the article intended to increase the availability of clean drinking water. (5)
1.2 Describe THREE arguments used in the article to convince the reader about the safety of recycled sewage water. (6)
1.3 List THREE processes that will be used to ensure that the recycled sewage water will be fit for human consumption. (3) [14]
1.1
1.2
1.3
Food security refers to the access, by all people at all times, to adequate, safe and nutritious food for a healthy and productive life. Food security may be influenced by the following factors:
Exponential growth of the human population
Droughts and floods
Poor farming practices - monoculture, pest control, loss of topsoil and the need for fertilizers
Alien plants and reduction of agricultural land
The loss of wild varieties and the impact on gene pools
Genetically engineered food
Food wastage
Questions
1. Study the table below and answer the questions that follow.
Country/Region | Total (kg) | Developed/ Developing Regions | Food loss and waste per person per year | |
At the production and retail stages (kg) | By consumers (kg) | |||
Europe | 280 | Developed | 190 | 90 |
North America and Oceania | 295 | Developed | 185 | 110 |
Industrialized Asia | 240 | Developed | 160 | 80 |
Sub-Saharan Africa | 160 | Developing | 155 | 5 |
North Africa, West and Central Asia | 215 | Developing | 180 | 35 |
South and Southeast Asia | 125 | Developing | 110 | 15 |
Latin America | 225 | Developing | 200 | 25 |
Adapted from CUP Biology: Jones and Jones, 2010
1.1 For Sub-Saharan Africa, calculate the food wastage by consumers as a percentage of the total food waste. (3)
1.2 Suggest a reason for this low percentage calculated in QUESTION 1.1 above. (2)
1.3 Explain the differences in the pattern of food wastage in developed and developing regions. (4)
1.4 State TWO possible ways of preventing the high levels of food waste that are found in the developed countries. (2) [11]
2. The following questions relate to the factors that threaten food security in a country.
2.1 Give ONE reason why there has been an increase in the demand for food over the years. (1)
2.2 State one way in which the use of each of the following helps to increase food productivity:
a) Pesticides (1)
b) Fertilizers (1)
2.3 Describe how the use of pesticides could destroy food chains. (2)
2.4 Explain why GMOs may be considered a threat to food security. (3) [8]
1.
1.1 Food Wastage in Sub-Saharan Africa
5/160✔ × 100✔ = 3.1%✔ (3)
1.2 Access to food is scarce and the food that is available is either provided by international aid agencies or subsistence farming✔. Very little food is bought and even less is bought from supermarkets.✔ There is no food left over to waste.✔ (any 2)
1.3 In developed regions: buy food from markets, shops and supermarkets, often in excess of their requirements and will throw unused food away.✔ The markets, shops and
supermarkets will also throw away unsold food.✔
In developing regions: people will depend more on small, local sources of food,✔ have less food security and will not have food in excess of their needs.✔ (4)
1.4 Possible ways to reduce food waste include:
2. 2.1 There has been a rapid increase in the human population✔ (1)
2.2
a) Pesticides kill the pests which destroy the crops✔ (1)
b) Fertilizers increase nutrient content in the soil✔ (1)
2.3 Secondary consumers e.g. birds can eat the pests with the poison✔, which can kill the birds3 thereby decreasing the population size of birds✔
OR
The pest can become extinct✔, and the population size of the secondary consumer feeding on the pest will also decrease✔ (any 1 × 2) (2)
2.4
Biodiversity refers to the variety of plant and animal species on Earth. Biodiversity ensures that we have food, fresh water, medicines and fuel that we obtain from our environment. It also ensures that the climate is regulated, floods are controlled (wetlands), diseases are kept in check (predators eat the sick animals) and water is purified (filtering by wetlands).
Biodiversity ensures that seeds are dispersed, nutrients are cycled (e.g. nitrogen and phosphorus) and oxygen and soil continue to form. It also helps improve our quality of life by providing us with forms of recreation and ecotourism. As biodiversity declines, these things do not occur as they should and the survival of humans becomes threatened.
11.4.1 Factors that reduce our biodiversity
Habitat destruction through:
Farming methods
Monoculture: Monoculture is the growing of one type of crop over large areas of land year after year. Monoculture replaces indigenous plants and reduces biodiversity. Insects that specialise in feeding on one type of crop spread rapidly because there are no natural enemies or barriers to stop them. This means the farmer needs to use more pesticides to kill them. Intensive use of agrochemicals such as fertilisers and pesticides often end up in rivers, streams and groundwater, poisoning species in the area and
causing eutrophication. This results in a large loss of biodiversity.
Overgrazing: It occurs when livestock such as sheep or cattle are kept in an area for too long; the vegetation is grazed to a point where it will not grow back. It causes soil erosion by removing the plants that bind the soil together with their roots. Topsoil is lost during rainstorms. This can lead to the extensive destruction of land through desertification which results in loss of biodiversity. Sometimes overgrazed land becomes subject to alien plant invaders which destroy habitats by taking over the land.
Golf Estates
Developments such as golf estates are a form of monoculture that requires large amounts of water, pesticides and fertilisers which may runoff and poison aquatic ecosystems. Housing associated with golf developments replaces large areas of natural vegetation.
Mining
Mining alters the environment and can negatively affect the biodiversity in an area. Pollutants in the form of dust and smoke may be released into the air while vegetation is removed and replaced with rock and waste dumps. Underground water may be poisoned because of sulphates and heavy metals released into them.
Urbanisation
The growth of large cities (urbanisation) also negatively impacts on biodiversity. Surfaces are covered with concrete, and natural habitats are destroyed to build houses and businesses. Habitat fragmentation causes the loss of biodiversity, as natural plants are replaced by exotic trees and plants.
Deforestation
Deforestation is the permanent destruction of indigenous forest and woodland areas. Deforestation is caused by human activities such as agriculture, logging, and using trees as firewood. Deforestation leads to the destruction of the habitats of other organisms, like frogs and insects, and this leads to the loss of biodiversity.
Loss of wetlands and grasslands
Grasslands and wetlands have unique plant and wildlife and provide many ecological services to humans. Destruction of these habitats will lead to the loss of species.
Poaching
Poaching refers to the illegal hunting of animals, either for food or because certain body parts can be sold for money. ‘Poaching’ may also be applied to plants that are removed and sold for profit e.g. medicinal plants. Some wild animals are hunted for food (‘bush meat’) and are on the verge of extinction. Elephants are poached for their tusks to make carvings and jewellery and rhinos are hunted for their horns which are used in the Far East for medicinal reasons.
Alien plant invasions
These plants are species that have been introduced into an area and which compete with the natural plants in the area. They can outcompete indigenous plants, thus reducing the biodiversity.
11.4.2 Ways in which our biodiversity can be maintained
Control of alien plant invasions
Alien invasive species may be controlled by mechanical, chemical and biological methods. Mechanical methods involve chopping down plants or physically removing them by hand and is very time consuming. Chemical control involves spraying herbicides onto the plants; this can pollute the environment and is expensive. Biological methods involve introducing a natural enemy from the alien plant’s environment and allowing it to reproduce and feed on the invasive plant.
Sustainable use of the environment
Sustainable use of the environment means using resources without harming the ability of future generations to use that resource. Substances from indigenous plants such as the African potato, Hoodia, rooibos and Devil’s claw all have economic and medicinal value. These indigenous plants can be used sustainably by encouraging traditional healers to grow their own plants and through improving education of the women who generally gather the plants in the wild. Encouraging traditional healers to be part of formal medical programmes would encourage training to be on- going and help establish sustainable use of medicinal plants. Legislation should be passed to limit the numbers of plants that can be harvested at one time and seeds of medicinal plants could be collected and distributed to increase plant numbers.
Questions
1. Study the following table showing a summary of the rhino poaching incidents in South Africa from 2006 - 2010.
Province | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | Total |
Kruger National Park (part of Limpopo) | 17 | 10 | 36 | 50 | 109 | 222 |
Gauteng | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 15 | 22 |
Limpopo | 0 | 0 | 23 | 16 | 37 | 76 |
Mpumalanga | 2 | 3 | 2 | 6 | 12 | 25 |
North West | 0 | 0 | 7 | 10 | 44 | 61 |
Eastern Cape | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 6 |
Free State | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 3 | 5 |
KwaZulu-Natal | 5 | 0 | 14 | 28 | 23 | 70 |
Northern Cape | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
Total Illegally hunted | 24 | 13 | 83 | 122 | 247 | 489 |
1.1 How many rhinos were illegally hunted in 2009? (1)
1.2 Suggest THREE ways in which the poaching of rhinos can be stopped. (3)
1.3 Describe the general trend observed in the table. (2)
1.4 By what percentage did the poaching of rhino incidents increase in North West from 2008 to 2010? Show all working. (3)
1.5 Use the data in the table and draw a bar graph to show the number of rhinos poached each year from 2006 to 2010 in South Africa. (7) [16]
2. Read the following passage on Rooibos (Aspalanthus linearis) and answer the questions that follow.
The Rooibos plant is used to make herbal tea. South Africa is the only commercial grower of Rooibos plants in the world. Rooibos tea is a caffeine-free beverage with health and medicinal benefits. Some of the benefits of drinking Rooibos tea are: it has a calming effect, it helps with digestion problems and it helps with infant colic. |
2.1 Describe TWO ways in which over-exploitation of plants, such as Rooibos, impacts on other life forms and the environment. (2)
2.2 Describe THREE strategies that could be used to prevent the over-exploitation of plants such as Rooibos. (3) [5]
1.
1.1 122 ✔ (1)
1.2
1.3 Rhino poaching ✔ has increased ✔ from 2008 to 2010 (2)
1.4 44✔ × 110 ✔ = 628,53% ✔ (3)
7 ✔ 1 ✔
1.5
2.
2.1
2.2
Solid waste is any solid material that is of no use to humans and which needs to be disposed of in a safe and environmentally friendly way.
Managing dumpsites for rehabilitation and prevention of soil and water pollution The simplest and most cost effective way of disposing of solid waste is to bury it in landfill sites. A landfill site is a hole where solid waste is dumped and then covered by soil. However, this way of disposing of solid waste contributes to soil and groundwater pollution because rain seeps through the waste to produce a toxic substance called leachate. To prevent the toxic leachate from reaching the groundwater, a plastic liner is placed
under the dumpsite area.
Rehabilitation of landfill sites occurs before they are closed down. This involves the covering of the old landfill site with clay soil, which is impermeable to water, and then it is covered with topsoil. Grass or other vegetation is then planted on the old landfill site. The growth of the plants stabilises the area and the old landfill site may be used as a recreational area such as a park or a golf course.
The need for recycling
Various methods may be used to manage solid waste, they include the reduction of waste, re-using waste and recycling of waste.
Using methane from dumpsites for domestic use: heating and lighting
Methane is a gas produced as a result of the decomposition of organic waste. The methane gas can be used as a fuel. Methane can be collected from landfill sites and used to generate electricity for domestic use - heat for cooking and electricity for lighting.
Safe disposal of nuclear waste
South Africa also uses radioactive material such as uranium to power its nuclear power station at Koeberg in the Western Cape. Unfortunately, a by-product of using uranium is nuclear waste that is still radioactive and therefore dangerous to living organisms. The nuclear waste is stored in thick steel drums and buried in trenches at special protected sites.
Questions
1. State FOUR strategies you would use to manage solid waste if you were appointed as the head of the waste disposal division of your town. (4)
2. The following table shows the total amount of solid waste and the amount of recyclable material dumped in a South African city landfill site over a number of years.
YEAR | TOTAL AMOUNT OF SOLID WASTE (MILLIONS OF TONS) | AMOUNT OF RECYCLABLE MATERIAL IN SOLID WASTE (MILLIONS OF TONS) |
2003 | 1,49 | 0,78 |
2004 | 1,59 | 0,82 |
2005 | 1,80 | 1,20 |
2006 | 1,93 | 1,30 |
2.1 Describe the general trend in the total amount of waste produced and the amount of recyclable materials dumped from 2003 to 2006. (2)
2.2 Explain TWO advantages of recycling. (4)
3. The graph below shows the percentages of various types of waste found on the grounds of a school.
3.1 Draw a table to illustrate the percentages of waste shown in the graph above. (5)
3.2 The school wants to manage the large amount of wastegenerated on a daily basis. They decide to recycle the waste.
3.2.1 Define ‘recycling’. (2)
3.2.2 Give TWO reasons why the recycling of waste is advantageous. (2) [19]
1.
2. 2.1 Both ✔ the total amount of waste produced and the amount of recyclable material increased ✔ from 2003 to 2006 (2)
2.2
3.
3.1 Percentages/amount of each type of waste on the school grounds
Type of waste | Percentages (%) |
Paper | 40 |
Plastic | 30 |
Organic matter | 5 |
Aluminium cans | 15 |
Glass bottles | 10 |
3.2
3.2.1 The process by which waste materials✔are treated in such a way that they can be used again✔/ reused (2)
3.2.2