1 / 24

Protecting Earth's Resources: Conservation and Stewardship

Learn about the importance of conservation and stewardship in protecting Earth's water, land, and air. Discover renewable and nonrenewable energy sources and how to preserve water resources, land resources, and reduce air pollution.

patriciacox
Download Presentation

Protecting Earth's Resources: Conservation and Stewardship

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 4 Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, & Air

  2. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air Keeping It Clean What are conservation and stewardship? • Humans greatly affect the land, water, and air. • If we wish to keep using our resources in the future, we need to conserve and care for them. • Conservationis the wise use of natural resources. By practicing conservation, we can help make sure that resources will be around for future generations.

  3. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air What are conservation and stewardship? • Stewardshipis the careful and responsible management of a resource. • Stewardship of Earth’s natural resources will ensure that the environment stays clean enough to help keep people and other living things healthy. • Any action that helps maintain or improve the environment is an act of stewardship.

  4. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air What are sources of energy? • Arenewableresourceis an energy source that can be easily reproduced or replaced by nature. • Renewable resources are replaced at a rate equal to or greater than the rate at which they are used. • Some examples of renewable resources are sunlight, wind, trees, and crops.

  5. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air What are sources of energy? • Anonrenewable resource is an energy source that cannot be produced, grown, or restored as fast as it is used. • For example, minerals such as uranium are nonrenewable because they can no longer be formed. • Other examples of nonrenewable resources are coal, petroleum, and natural gas. They formed over millions of years below Earth’s surface, and can take millions of years to form again.

  6. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air Water Wise! How can we preserve water resources? • Earth’s freshwater supply is limited, so it is important to use this resource very carefully. • There are many ways to reduce water usage. • People should also be careful to avoid polluting water, because the quality of water is important to the health of both humans and ecosystems.

  7. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we preserve water resources? • The main way to protect drinking water is by keeping pollution from entering streams, lakes, and other water sources. • Certain laws indicate how clean drinking water must be and limit the types of chemicals that can be released into water. • Individuals can help by disposing of toxic chemicals safely and by reducing the amount of fertilizer used on gardens.

  8. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air This Land Is Your Land How can we preserve land resources? • We must protect land resources from overuse and pollution and repair damage that has already been done. • Preservation, or protecting land from being damaged or changed, is very important. • Local, state, and national parks protect many natural areas and help ensure the survival of many species.

  9. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we preserve land resources? • Reforestation, which is the process of planting trees to re-establish forestland, is important. • Some old forests need to stay intact for the animals that need them to survive.

  10. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we preserve land resources? • Land can be damaged by mining, development, and agriculture. • Reclamation is the process by which a damaged land area is returned to nearly the condition it was in before people used it. • Many national and state laws guide land reclamation.

  11. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we preserve land resources? • Urban sprawl is the outward spread of suburban areas around cities. • Urban sprawl leaves less land for native plants and animals. • Reducing urban sprawl helps protect land resources. This can be done by constructing taller buildings and placing businesses and houses close to one another.

  12. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we preserve land resources? • One of the most important things we can do to preserve land resources is recycling. • Recycling is the process of recovering valuable materials from waste or scrap. • Everyone can help protect land resources by recycling.

  13. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we preserve land resources? • Soil conservation protects soil from erosion or degradation by overuse or pollution. • For example, farmers can change the way they plow to conserve soil. • Soil conservation can be done through contour plowing, strip cropping, terracing, crop rotation, or no-till farming.

  14. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air Into Thin Air How can we reduce air pollution? • Everybody can help reduce air pollution in many different ways. • Energy conservation is one of the most important ways to reduce air pollution.

  15. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we reduce air pollution? • Fossilfuelsare energy resources made from carbon-rich plant and animal remains (coal, petroleum, natural gas). • Fossil fuels are the most commonly used energy resource. When burned, they release carbon dioxide, harmful acids and other forms of pollution into the air.

  16. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air What are some fossil fuels? • Coal is a sedimentary rock formed from the remains of dead plants at the bottom of ancient swamps. • Coal mining can involve removing soil and rocks or creating deep mines. • These processes can destroy landscapes and pollute water supplies.

  17. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air What are some fossil fuels? • Some fossil fuels are gases that became trapped in rock formations. • Methane is the main component of natural gas. • Natural gas burns more cleanly than other fossil fuels. However, it does produce carbon dioxide upon burning, and leaks can be dangerous.

  18. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air What are some fossil fuels? • Petroleum means “rock oil.” It formed from the remains of single-celled aquatic organisms that lived long ago. • After petroleum is mined, it is separated into fuels such as gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel. • Transporting oil can result in spills that pollute the environment and harm wildlife. Burning petroleum produces pollutants.

  19. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we reduce air pollution? • There are many ways to conserve energy, such as by using energy-efficient appliances, decreasing our use of air conditioners and heaters, and using public transportation. • There are also many ways to generate energy without creating much air pollution. • By developing technology for alternative energy resources, we reduce the amount of pollution created by burning fossil fuels. • For example, electricity can be generated by wind turbines, solar panels, moving water, and geothermal energy.

  20. Unit 4Lesson 4 Protecting Earth’s Water, Land, and Air How can we reduce air pollution? • Governments in many countries work independently and together to reduce air pollution. • Because air isn’t contained by borders, some solutions must be international. • The Kyoto Protocol is a worldwide effort to limit the release of greenhouse gases—pollution that can warm the atmosphere.

More Related