GE 15 - Week 6 To 7
GE 15 - Week 6 To 7
GE 15 - Week 6 To 7
Q and A LIST
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KEYWORDS INDEX
BIG PICTURE IN FOCUS: U.L.O. -1. Discuss the distribution, movement, , and fate of
toxins in the environment, explain some principles of toxicology, and summarize their
implications for the agriculture sector.
In this section, the essential terms relevant to the study environmental science ULO-
1 will be operationally defined to establish a standard frame in the field of natural sciences
about the global issues of environmental toxicology. Pollution as well occurrence of global
diseases affecting human health and also the implications of toxic substances to the food
and agriculture sector. You will encounter these terms as we go through environmental
science studies with how people, and development and intimately connected, and the
implications to ecological health and safety. It involves a broader understanding of toxic
and hazardous substances and their corresponding disposal and treatment processes.
Please refer to the definition in case you will encounter difficulty in the knowledge of
environmental science concepts.
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7. Teratogens. Any agent that can disrupt embryonic or fetal development causes a
child's congenital disability or may completely cease the pregnancy. These agents
include radiation, maternal infections, chemicals, or drugs.
12. Acute effects. A physiological reaction in a human or animal body which cause
severe symptoms that could rapidly develop through acute exposure to toxic
substances. However, it may lead to chronic health effects if the cause is not
removed.
13. Chronic effects. An adverse effect on animals or the human body with symptoms
that develop slowly, due to prolonged and continuous exposure to low
concentrations of a hazardous substance.
14. Risk assessment. The combined effort of identifying and analyzing potential events
can negatively affect individuals, assets, and even the environment. It also makes
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mindful judgments on the tolerability of the risk analysis and examines factors
influencing it.
16. Soil horizon. A layer parallel to the surfaces of the soil whose biological, chemical,
and physical characteristics differ from the layers above and beneath. Horizons are
defined in many cases by noticeable physical features, mainly color and texture.
17. Macronutrients. Nutrients that provide calories or energy and are required in large
amounts to maintain body functions and carry out daily activities.
19. Pesticides. Chemical compounds used to eliminate pests, such as insects, rodents,
fungi, and weeds. These chemicals are also used in public health to kill disease
vectors (e.g., mosquitoes) and pests that damage crops.
20. Herbicides. Pesticides used to kill unwanted plants (weeds). There are selective
herbicides that explicitly target a weed/s by interfering with its growth without
harming the desired crop.
To perform the aforesaid big picture (unit learning outcomes) for the forth to sixth
weeks of the course, you need to fully understand the following essential knowledge that
will be laid down in the succeeding pages. Please note that you can refer to other resources;
thus you are expected to utilize other books, research articles, and other available resources
in the university library (e.g., e-library, search.proquest.com, etc.)
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Health
Pollution
Pollution is a term used to describe the undesirable change in the environment brought
by the introduction of harmful materials or the production of unhealthy conditions (heat,
cold, sound). Contamination has a meaning similar to that of pollution and implies making
something unsuitable for specific use through the introduction of unwanted materials. The
term toxin refers to substances (pollutants) that are poisonous to living things. Toxicology
refers to the science that studies viruses or potential toxins. Toxicologists are scientists who
study in this field. A carcinogen is a toxin that increases cancer risk and one of the most
feared and controlled types of toxins in our society. Pollutants are commonly introduced
into the environment by way of point sources, such as smokestacks. Area sources, also
known as nonpoint sources, are more dispersed around the land, and it involves industrial
pollution and mobile sources, such as vehicle exhaust.
Toxicology
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EFFECTS OF TOXINS
Allergens are immune-activating agents. Some allergens act as antigens directly; that is,
white blood cells recognize them as foreign and stimulate the production of specific
antibodies. Certain allergens function indirectly by linking and modifying the composition
of foreign materials and become antigenic and induce an immune system to the response.
Formaldehyde is an excellent example of a widely used chemical that is a potent sensitizer
of the immune system. It is directly allergenic and can also trigger reactions to other
substances. Commonly used in plastics, wood products, insulation, glue, and fabrics,
formaldehyde concentrations in indoor air can be thousands of times higher than in healthy
outdoor air. Some people who suffer from sick building syndrome have headaches,
allergies, and chronic fatigue. And other symptoms caused by improperly ventilated indoor
air contaminate with carbon monoxide, mold spores, nitrogen oxide, formaldehyde, and
other pollutants emitted from carpets, furniture, fabrics, and construction materials and
other sources.
Endocrine disruptors are chemicals that disrupt the natural activity of hormones.
Hormones are chemicals released by cells into the bloodstreams in one part of the body to
regulate the function and development of tissues and organs in the body. We realize now
that some of the most gradual, yet harmful effects of persistent chemicals such as dioxins
and P.C.B.s are that they interfere with healthy growth, development, and physiology of a
variety of animals—including humans—at shallow doses.
Neurotoxins are a particular class of metabolic poisons that individually attack nerve cells
(neurons). The nervous system has an essential function in controlling the body activities,
especially to a fast-acting and devastating events. Neurotoxins have different types, and it
acts in different ways. Heavy metals like lead and mercury destroy nerve cells and cause
permanent brain damage. Organophosphates (Malathion, Parathion) and carbamates
(carbaryl, zineb, maneb) inhibit acetylcholinesterase, the enzymes that control the transfer
of signals between nerve cells and the tissues or organs they innervate (e.g., muscle).
Anesthetics (ether, chloroform, halothane, etc.) and chlorinated hydrocarbons (D.D.T.,
Dieldrin, Aldrin) disrupt nerve cell membranes needed for nerve action. Most neurotoxins
are both fast-acting and highly toxic.
Mutagens are agents that damage or modify the genetic material (D.N.A.) in cells, such as
chemicals and radiation. If the cost happens during embryonic or fetal development, this
may contribute to congenital disability. Later in life, genetic damage can contribute to
neoplastic (tumor) formation. If reproductive cells undergo injury, the effects may be
passed on to future generations. Cells have repair mechanisms to diagnose and repair
defective genetic material, but specific changes may be hidden, and the repair cycle itself
can be flawed. It is widely agreed that there is no “safe” threshold for mutagens exposure.
Any contact has the potential to cause harm.
Teratogens are chemicals substance or other factors which cause different abnormalities
during embryonic growth and development. Some chemicals that are usually not
dangerous may cause a severe problem at these vulnerable stages of life. Alcohol is
probably the most popular teratogen in the world. Drinking during pregnancy can lead to
fetal alcohol syndrome—a cluster of complications that persist throughout a child’s life,
including craniofacial abnormalities, developmental disorder, behavioral problems, and
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mental defects. Even one alcoholic drink a day has been associated with reduced birth
weight during pregnancy.
Carcinogens are substances that cause cancer, invasive, and out-of-control cell growth
resulting in malignant tumors. Cancer rates rose over the twentieth century in most
developed nations, and cancer is now the second leading cause of death in the U.S., killing
more than half a million people in 2002.
There are several origins of poisonous and dangerous chemicals in the environment
and various factors related to each compound itself. The sources are toxics and hazardous
chemicals in the environment that is related to the release of chemicals itself. The target of
these chemicals is both biotic and abiotic community. The dose (amount), route of entry,
the timing of exposure, and sensitivity of the organism all play an essential function in
determining toxicity. In this section, we will look at each of these characteristics and how it
affects environmental health.
Factors in Environmental Toxicity
Solubility
Solubility is one of the essential characteristics in determining how, where, and when a
toxic material will move through the environment. It also includes the body at its place of
action. The classification of chemical substances divides into two main groups:
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Since water is everywhere, water-soluble compounds move rapidly and widely in the
environment. They seem to have easy access to most cells in the body since aqueous
solutions bathe all our cells. Molecules that are oil-or fat-soluble (usually organic molecules)
generally need a carrier to move through the environment, into, and within, the body. Once
inside the body, however, oil-soluble toxins quickly pass into tissues and cells, since the
membranes that enclose the cells are composed of similar oil-soluble chemicals. Once they
get inside cells, oil-soluble materials are likely to be accumulated and stored in lipid
deposits. They are protected from metabolic breakdown and will continue for several years.
Exposure
Just as there are many sources of toxins in our environment, there are many routes
for entry of dangerous substances into our bodies. Airborne toxins generally cause more
ill-health compared to other sources. Our lungs are programmed to efficiently exchange
gases and, at the same time, absorb toxins. The complication in measuring toxicity is that
significant differences in sensitivity exist between species.
The cell performs a selective absorption and storage of variation of molecules called
bioaccumulation. It allows them to accumulate nutrients and essential minerals, but at the
same time, they also may absorb and store harmful substances through these same
mechanisms. Toxins that are instead dilute in the environment can reach dangerous levels
inside cells and tissues through this process of bioaccumulation. The effects of toxins also
are magnified in the environment through food webs. When organisms ingest other
organisms making toxins accumulated from the base and concentrated in the highest
trophic level, it is called biomagnification.
Persistence
Some chemical compounds are volatile and degrade rapidly under most environmental
conditions so that their concentrations decline quickly after release. Most modern
herbicides and pesticides, for instance, promptly lose their toxicity. Other substances are
more persistent and last for years or even centuries in the environment. Metals—such as
lead—P.V.C. plastics, chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides, and asbestos are valuable
because they are resistant to degradation. However, this stability causes problems because
these materials persist in the environment and have unexpected effects far from their
original use sites. Some persistent organic pollutants (P.O.P.s) have become extremely
widespread, being found from the tropics to the Arctic. Long-living top predators such as
bears, humans, raptors, and sharks are where it frequently accumulate. The following are
some of the most significant concerns:
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§ Bisphenol A (B.P.A.), widely used in various products such as bottled water and
tooth-protecting sealants. It is a vital component in the creation of polycarbonate
plastics. Furthermore, it is an environmental estrogen and may alter sexual
development in both males and females. It has been found in humans with or
without known chemical exposure. It has been found out that the presence of such
a chemical causes abnormal chromosome numbers called aneuploidy. Having this
kind of abnormality will result in several forms of mental retardation and
miscarriages during pregnancy.
Interactions
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Repair Mechanisms. Our body performs a damage repair function caused by the
exposure to regular wear-and-tear or toxic or hazardous materials. It allows
individual cells to have enzymes to help repair the damage in the Deoxyribonucleic
acid (D.N.A.) and protein at the molecular level, organs, and tissues. The skin and
the epithelial lining of our gastrointestinal tract, blood vessels, lungs, and urogenital
systems have capabilities of having high cellular reproduction rates to replace
damaged cells. There is a chance that some cells will lose healthy growth controls
with each reproduction cycle, worst, if these cells run amok, creating a tumor. Thus,
carcinogenic are agents that irritate tissue such as smoking or drinking. High risk of
developing cancer is more significant in those tissues with high cell-replacement
rates.
MEASURING TOXICITY
In controlled conditions, it is the most commonly used and widely accepted toxicity
test to expose a population of laboratory animals to measured doses of specific substances.
This procedure takes so much time, painful, expensive, and debilitating to the animals used
as specimens in tests. Dose/response curves are not always symmetrical, making it
challenging to compare the toxicity of unlike chemicals or different species of organisms.
A convenient way to describe the toxicity of a chemical is to determine the dose to which
fifty percent (50%) of the test population is sensitive. In the case of a lethal dose (L.D.), this
is called the LD50.
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Acute effects have been the effects of most toxics we have discussed. They are caused by
a single exposure to the toxin and result in an immediate health crisis of some sort. An
individual survives an urgent crisis due to an acute reaction, most likely because the effects
are reversible.
RISK ASSESSMENT
Risk is the possibility or results of suffering harm or loss by hazard and an indication
of the severe damage. Risk assessment (R.A.) is the scientific process of estimating the
threat that particular hazards pose to human health. It is the overall process of hazard
identification, risk analysis, and risk evaluation. Risk assessment for identified toxicity
hazards (for example, lead) includes collection and analysis of site data, development of
exposure and risk calculations, and preparation of human health and ecological impact
reports.
1. magnitude
2. frequency
3. duration, and
4. route of exposure to a possible toxin.
Toxicity assessment weighs all available evidence and estimates the potential for
adverse health effects to occur. Risk assessment can also define as the process of
determining potential adverse health effects of exposure to pollutants and potentially toxic
materials. Exposure to toxic air pollutants can intensify your health risks. For example, if you
live near a factory that discharges cancer-causing chemicals and inhale contaminated air,
your chance of getting cancer can increase.
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TOLERANCE
Behavioral tolerance results from changes in the behavior; for example, mice learn
to avoid traps.
Farmers used to plant crops in neat fields and rows. These simple geometric layouts
make life easy for pests because the crop plants have no place to hide. In natural
ecosystems, many different species of plants grow mixed in intricate patterns, so it is harder
for pests to find their favorite victims. Agroecosystems require plowing, which is unlike any
natural soil disturbance that nothing in nature repeatedly and regularly turns over the soil
to a specific depth. Plowing exposes the soil to erosion and damages its physical structure,
leading to a decline in organic matter and chemical elements. They may include
genetically modified crops.
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Soils
Soil Horizon
Horizon O is often brown or black, and most are organic materials, including
decomposed or decomposing leaves and twigs.
A Horizon is often light black to brown and composed of both mineral and organic
materials. Leaching—the process of draining, washing, or draining earth materials
by the percolation of other liquids or groundwater – occurs in the horizon A and
moves clay and other materials, such as Calcium (Ca) and iron (Fe), to the horizon
B.
Horizon B is also known as the zone of accumulation and enriched in clay, iron
oxides, carbonate, silica, or other material leached from overlying horizons.
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Components of Soils
1. Sand and gravel are mineral particles that come from bedrock. Either coming
from the same environment or came from somewhere else, like blown by the
wind.
2. Silt and clay are tiny mineral particles. Clay holds water due to its flat surfaces
and ionic charges, which causes it to be sticky.
3. Dead organic materials are plant matter decaying; gives nutrients and the
black/brown color of the soil.
4. Soil fauna and flora are the living organisms present, such as soil fungi, worms,
bacteria, insects (help recycle organic compounds and nutrients), and plant
roots.
5. Water that comes from either rainfall or groundwater, which is essential for the
fauna and flora
6. Air that is present between the soil. The soil has tiny pockets of air that help the
organisms survive underneath.
Limiting Factors
Crops need around 20 chemical elements at just the right amounts, at the correct
times, and in the right proportions to each other. There life-important chemical elements
can be divided into two groups:
The pesticide is a general term for a chemical that kills pests, usually a toxic
chemical, but sometimes we also consider chemicals that drive pests away from pesticides.
Some pest control compounds kill a wide range of living things and are called biocides.
Herbicides are chemicals that kill plants; insecticides kill insects, and fungicides kill fungi.
The scientific, industrial revolution brought significant changes in agriculture pest control,
which we can divide into four stages:
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pesticides to be made of pure organic compounds, but they were widely toxic.
Arsenic was used in one of the previous pesticides. Arsenic was toxic to all life, even
to humans. It was useful in eliminating pests, but beneficial organisms went along
with them. It was considered very dangerous to use.
Stage 2: Petroleum-Based Sprays and Natural Plant Chemicals. (from the 1930s
onward) Plants produce natural pesticides as a defense mechanism against
herbivores and disease. The tobacco plant produced nicotine, an insecticide, and
even used it today as the primary agent. Natural plant pesticides are safer than most,
but it wasn’t the same as the desired effectiveness.
1. The reduction of the target species caused the competing second species to
flourish because of the lack of competition between the two species. This caused
the second species to become pests.
2. The pest develops resistance to pesticides through evolution and natural
selection, which favor those who have more excellent immunity to the chemical.
Resistance has grown to many insecticides.
Biological control uses the natural enemy of the target pests to limit their
growth. Caterpillars and other larvae pests can be combatted with using the
bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis, also known as B.T., which is very useful.
Types of Pesticides
One way to classify pesticides is by their chemical structure and main components.
Some are organic (carbon-based) compounds. Others are toxic metals (such as arsenic) or
halogens (such as bromine).
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Inorganic pesticides are compounds made from toxic elements, like sulfur, copper,
arsenic, and mercury. These elements are considered a broad-spectrum poison,
because they are highly poisonous and indestructible, which means they stay in the
environment forever. They usually act nerve toxins. Historically, the primary
pesticide applied to apples, and other orchard crops were arsenic powder, but
traces of the dust remain in groundwater or soil in many agricultural areas.
Natural organic pesticides, also known as botanicals, are extracts from plants. An
example before was nicotine and nicotinoid alkaloids extracted from tobacco, and
pyrethrum, extracted from Chrysanthemum cinerariaefolium. These compounds
also include turpentine, phenols, and other aromatic oils from conifers. These
extracts are toxic to insects, and may even prevent wood decay.
Microbial agents and biological controls use living organisms or toxins extracted
from them that are used instead of pesticides. A natural soil bacterium, Bacillus
thuringiensis, is one of the chief pest control agents allowed in organic farming.
When eaten, this bacterium targets caterpillars and beetles and eliminates them by
producing a toxin that destroys their digestive tract lining.
Despite dire predictions that runaway population growth would soon lead to terrible
famines, world food supplies have more than kept up with increasing human numbers over
the past two centuries. The past 40 years have seen especially encouraging strides in
reducing world hunger. More than 850 million people today are considered chronically
hungry: their diets don’t provide the 2,200 kcal per day, which is deemed necessary for a
healthy and productive life. Poverty is the greatest threat to food security or the ability to
obtain sufficient food on a day-to-day basis. Food security occurs at multiple scales. In the
poorest countries, hunger may affect nearly everyone.
Around 50 years ago, agricultural research stations started breeding tropical wheat
and rice varieties to provide food for developing countries with a growing population. From
Mexico, Norman Borlaug developed one of the first "miracle" variations, a dwarf, high-
yielding grain. Around the same period, the International Rice Institute in the Philippines
also developed a dwarf rice strain produced three or four times more than other varieties
during that time. This production of new types that caused dramatic increases of yield was
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called the green revolution. It is one of the main reasons why food production was able to
keep up with the rapid rise in the world population over the past decades.
The green revolution varieties are considered "high responders" because they yield
more product if given optimum water, fertilizers, and pesticides. On the other hand, under
suboptimum conditions, high responders may not produce as well as traditional varieties.
Impoverished farmers cannot afford expensive fertilizers, seeds, and water to be part of the
green revolution movement, and they become left behind.
Genetic engineering is the process where genetic material from one organism is removed
and introduced into the chromosomes of another organism. This new technology has the
potential to increase both the quantity and quality of our food supply significantly. Building
entire new genes, and even organisms is now a strong possibility. Taking bits of desired
D.N.A. and synthesizing D.N.A. sequences are done to produced genetically modified
organisms (G.M.O.s), which exhibit the desired characteristics. Proponents predict
dramatic benefits from genetic engineering. Current research is done to improve the yield
and development of crops that resist drought, frost, or diseases.
Genetic engineering done for agriculture involves several different practices that are
grouped as follows:
Terminator genes are present in crop seeds to make it sterile (unable to form offspring).
This gene added for economic and environmental reasons. In theory, it prevents a
genetically modified crop from growing elsewhere.
AQUACULTURE
Aquaculture can be extremely productive on a per-area basis, partly because flowing water
brings food from outside into the pond or enclosure. Farming of marine and freshwater
protein sources is growing and can become a significant way to provide food of high
nutritional quality. Mariculture is the farming of saltwater fishes. It includes only produces
a fraction of the total marine fish catch, but has increased in the last decades and will likely
to increase further in the future.
Self-Help: You can refer to the sources below to help you further
understand the lesson.
Marten. G.G. 2008. Human Ecology: Basic Concepts for Sustainable Development.
Earthscan, USA
Marten. G.G. 2008. Human Ecology: Basic Concepts for Sustainable Development.
Earthscan, USA
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Cunningham, W. P., and Cunningham, M., 2010. Environmental Science: A Global Concern.
11th Edition. McGraw Hill, New York.
Botkin, D., and Keller, E., 2011. Environmental Science: Earth as a Living Planet. 8th Edition.
John Wiley and Sons, USA
Activity No. 4. Now that you have known the most essential terms in the study of
environmental science. Let us try to check your understanding of these terms. In the space
provided, write the terms, being asked in the following statements:
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Activity No. 4. Getting acquainted with the essential terms in studying environmental
toxicology and health, evolution, ecosystems, and interactions will not be sufficient. What
matters is that you should be able to identify and discuss different toxic elements present
in the environment, whether naturally occurring or human-induced. It is also important to
determine the route and persistence of these pollutants to develop measures and
mechanisms to reduce the risk of potential food contamination and other agricultural
resources. Now, I will require you to explain your answers thoroughly.
4. How are toxic elements being deposited in the environment? Can these toxic
elements/ chemicals contaminate the food chain?
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Activity No. 4. Studying the environment and its components requires a deeper
understanding of the core areas of environmental science. This involves understanding the
influence of human dimensions as well as the natural phenomena that resulted in different
alterations of the natural ecosystems, which eventually creates threats and danger both the
biological, physical, and chemical components of an ecosystem. Also, this includes the
analysis and understanding of how humanmade and natural components react with one
another. Based on the definitions and the essential elements in the study of environmental
and the learning exercises that you have done, please feel free to indicate your arguments
or lessons learned below.
1. Different types of elements, whether naturally present or human-induced, have
implications for biological safety as these elements tend to persist in the
environment due to its non-biodegradable nature. Since it continues, it poses
threats to human health as well as security and food safety.
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___________________________________________________________________________
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Q and A LIST
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
KEYWORDS INDEX
BIG PICTURE IN FOCUS: ULO -2. Discuss biodiversity and the species concept and explain
some environmental problems associated with biological diversity.
In this section, the essential terms relevant to the study of biodiversity and environmental
associated problems. You will encounter these terms as we go through the reviews of
ecological science, particularly on biological diversity, threats and challenges, and how
people and intimately connected and the implications of rapid population growth and
towards the environment. It involves a broader understanding of environmental problems,
making judgments evaluating different environmental and their functions. Please refer to
the definition in case you will encounter difficulty in the understanding of environmental
science concepts.
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2. The aesthetic is a branch of philosophy that deals with the nature of beauty and
taste, as well as the philosophy of art.
2.1. It examines subjective and sensory-emotional values, or sometimes called
judgments of sentiment and taste.
3. Mutation. An alteration in the nucleotide sequence of the genome of an organism,
virus, or extrachromosomal DNA.
3.1. Viral genomes can be of either DNA or RNA.
4. DNA. A molecule composed of two polynucleotide chains that coil around each
other to form a double helix carrying genetic instructions for the development,
functioning, growth, and reproduction of all known organisms and many viruses.
4.1. DNA and ribonucleic acid are nucleic acids.
5. Adenine. A nucleobase. It is one of the four nucleobases in the nucleic acid of DNA
that are represented by the letters G–C–A–T. The three others are guanine, cytosine,
and thymine.
6. Guanine. One of the four main nucleobases found in the nucleic acids DNA and
RNA, the others being adenine, cytosine, and thymine.
6.1. In DNA, guanine is pair with cytosine.
6.2. The guanine nucleoside is called guanosine.
7. Cytosine. One of the four main bases found in DNA and RNA, along with adenine,
guanine, and thymine.
7.1. It is a pyrimidine derivative, with a heterocyclic aromatic ring and two
substituents attached.
7.2. The nucleoside of cytosine is cytidine.
7.3. In Watson-Crick base pairing, it forms three hydrogen bonds with guanine.
8. Thymine. One of the four nucleobases in the nucleic acid of DNA that are
represented by the letters G–C–A–T.
8.1. The others are adenine, guanine, and cytosine. Thymine is also known as 5-
methyl uracil, a pyrimidine nucleobase.
8.2. In RNA, thymine is replacing by the nucleobase uracil.
9. Migration is the movement of people from one place to another with the intention
of settling, permanently or temporarily, at a new location.
9.1. The movement is often over long distances and from one country to another,
but internal migration is also possible; indeed, this is the dominant form
globally.
10. Founder effect. The loss of genetic variation occurs when a new population
establishes a minimal number of individuals from a larger population. It was first fully
outlined by Ernst Mayr in 1942, using existing theoretical work by those such as
Sewall Wright.
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11. Ecological extinction. The reduction of a species to such low abundance that,
although it is still present in the community, no longer interacts significantly with
other species".
11.1. Ecological extinction stands out because it is the interaction ecology of a
species that is important for conservation work.
12. Invasive species. A species that is not native to a specific location tends to spread
to a degree believed to damage the environment, human economy, or human
health.
15. Open canopy. Describes a kind of forest or woodland in which the tops or crowns
of the trees do not touch each other or overlap, as with a closed canopy.
16. Primary forests are forests of native tree species, where there are no clearly visible
indications of human activities, and the ecological processes are not significantly
disturbed.
16.1. Secondary forests regenerate on native forests, which have been cleared
by natural or human-made causes, such as agriculture or ranching.
17. Pollution. The introduction of contaminants into the natural environment that
causes adverse change.
17.1. Pollution can take the form of chemical substances or energy, such as noise,
heat, or light. Pollutants, the components of pollution, can be either foreign
substances/energies or naturally occurring contaminants.
19. Genes. A sequence of nucleotides in DNA or RNA encodes the synthesis of a gene
product, either RNA or protein. During gene expression, the DNA is first copied into
RNA.
19.1. The RNA can be directly functional or be the standard template for a protein
that performs a function.
20. Genotype. The part of the genetic makeup of a cell, and therefore of any individual,
which determines one of its characteristics.
20.1. The term was coined by the Danish botanist, plant physiologist, and
geneticist Wilhelm Johannsen in 1903.
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To perform the aforesaid big picture (unit learning outcomes) for the eighth to nineth weeks
of the course, you need fully understand the following essential knowledge that will be laid
down in the succeeding pages. Please note that you are not limited to refer to these
resources exclusively. Thus, you are expected to utilize other books, research articles, and
other available resources in the university library. e.g.,e-library, search.proquest.com, etc.
A population is a group of individuals of the same species living in the same area
or interbreeding and sharing genetic information. A species is all individuals that are
capable of interbreeding. A species is made up of populations. There are nine primary
reasons: utilitarian, public service, ecological, moral, theological, aesthetic, recreational,
spiritual, and creative.
Public service means that nature and diversity provide some service, such as taking
up carbon dioxide or pollinating flowers that are essential or valuable to human life
and would be expensive or impossible to do ourselves.
Ecological refers to the fact that species have roles in their ecosystems. Some of
these are necessary for the persistence of their ecosystems, perhaps even for the
persistence of all life. Scientific research tells us which species have such ecosystem
roles.
The moral reason for valuing biodiversity is that species have a right to exist,
independent of their value to people.
The theological reason is that some religions value nature and diversity, and a
person who subscribes to that religion supports this belief.
Recreational is self-explanatory— people enjoy getting out into nature, not just
because it is beautiful to look at but because it provides us with healthful activities
that we enjoy.
Spiritual describes the way contact with nature, and its diversity often moves
people, and uplifting often perceived as a religious experience.
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Creative refers to the fact that artists, writers, and musicians find stimulation for their
creativity in nature and its diversity.
Basics of Biodiversity
Biological Evolution
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Natural Selection. When there is variation within a species, some individuals may
be better suited to the environment than others. (Change is not always for the better.
Mutation can result in a new species whether or not that species is better adapted
than its parent species to the environment.) Organisms whose biological
characteristics make them better able to survive and reproduce in their environment
leave more offspring than others. Their descendants form a larger proportion of the
next generation and are more “fit” for the environment. This process of increasing
the proportion of offspring is called natural selection. Which inherited
characteristics lead to more offspring depends on the specific characteristics of an
environment, and as the environment changes over time, the characteristics’ “fit” will
also change. In summary, natural selection involves four primary factors:
1. The inheritance of traits from one generation to the next and some variation
in these traits—that is, genetic variability.
2. Environmental variability.
3. Differential reproduction (differences in numbers of offspring per individual)
which varies with the environment.
4. Influence of the environment on survival and reproduction.
Genetic Drift refers to changes in the frequency of a gene in a population due not
to mutation, selection, or migration, but simply to chance. One way this happens is
through the founder effect. The founder effect occurs when a small number of
individuals are isolated from a larger population; they may have much less genetic
variation than the original species (and usually do), and the characteristics that the
isolated population has will be affected by chance. In the founder effect and genetic
Drift, individuals may not be better adapted to the environment; they may be more
poorly adapted or neutrally adapted. Genetic Drift can occur in any small population
and may present conservation problems when it is by chance isolated from the main
population.
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1. Environmental stress.
2. Extreme environments (conditions near the limit of what living things can
withstand).
3. A severe limitation in the supply of an essential resource.
4. Extreme amounts of disturbance.
5. Recent introduction of exotic species (species from other areas).
6. Geographic isolation (being on a real or ecological island).
Threats to Biodiversity
Habitats Destruction. The most important extinction threat for most species—
especially terrestrial ones—is habitat loss. Perhaps the most obvious example of
habitat destruction is clear-cutting of forests and conversion of grasslands to crop
fields.
Pollution. We have known that toxic pollutants can have disastrous effects on local
populations of organisms for a long time. Pesticide-linked declines of top predators,
such as eagles, osprey, falcons, and pelicans, were well documented in the 1970s.
Declining populations of marine mammals, alligators, fish, and other wildlife alert us
to the connection between pollution and health. Lead poisoning is another major
cause of mortality for many species of wildlife.
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fossil fuels and minerals, build more houses, and use more water. All of these
demands impact wild species.
Over the years, we have gradually become aware of the harm we have done—and continue
to do—to wildlife and biological resources. Slowly, we are adopting national legislation and
international treaties to protect these irreplaceable assets. Parks, wildlife refuges, nature
preserves, zoos, and restoration programs have been established to protect nature and
rebuild depleted populations. Where earlier regulations had been focused almost
exclusively on “game” animals, these programs seek to identify all endangered species and
populations and to save as much biodiversity as possible, regardless of its usefulness to
humans.
A variety of terms are used for rare or endangered species thought to merit special
attention:
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Forests
Forests have always been important to people; indeed, forests and civilization have always
been closely linked. Since the earliest civilizations—in fact, since some of the earliest human
cultures—wood has been one of the major building materials and the most readily available
and widely used fuel. Forests are widely distributed, but the most significant remaining
areas are in the humid equatorial regions and the cold boreal forests of high latitudes.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) defines forest as any area where trees
cover more than 10 percent of the land. This definition includes a variety of forest types
ranging from open savannas, where trees cover less than 20 percent of the ground, to
closed-canopy forests, in which tree crowns overlap to cover most of the ground. Globally,
about one-third of all forests are categorized as primary forests. Unfortunately, an
estimated 6 million ha (15 million acres) of these irreplaceable forests are cleared or heavily
damaged every year.
Four ways that a forest (or a vegetated area) can affect the atmosphere:
1. Some solar radiation is absorbed by vegetation, and some is reflected, changing the
local energy budget, compared to a non-forest environment.
2. evaporation and transpiration from plants, together called evapotranspiration,
transfers water to the atmosphere
3. photosynthesis by trees releases oxygen into the atmosphere and removes carbon
dioxide, a greenhouse gas, cooling the temperature of the atmosphere
4. near-surface wind is reduced because the vegetation —especially trees—produces
roughness near the ground that slows the wind.
While most forests and grasslands serve utilitarian purposes, many nations have set
aside some natural areas for ecological, cultural, or recreational purposes. Some of these
preserves have existed for thousands of years. Different levels of protection are found in
nature preserves. A park is an area set aside for use by people. Although people may use
it, a nature preserve has as its primary purpose the conservation of some resource, typically
a biological one. Every park or preserve is an ecological island of one kind of landscape
surrounded by a different kind of landscape, or several different kinds.
Ecological and physical islands have special ecological qualities, and island
biogeography concepts are used in the design and management of parks. One of the
important differences between a park and a truly natural wilderness area is that a park has
definite boundaries. These boundaries are usually arbitrary from an ecological viewpoint
and have been established for political, economic, or historical reasons unrelated to the
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natural ecosystem. Many natural parks and preserves are increasingly isolated, remnant
fragments of ecosystems that once extended over large areas.
As park ecosystems are shrinking, they are also becoming more important for
maintaining biological diversity. Principles of landscape design and landscape structure
become important in managing and restoring these shrinking islands of habitat. One of the
reasons large preserves are considered better than small preserves is that they have more
core habitat, areas deep in the interior of a habitat area, and that core habitat has better
conditions for specialized species than do edges. Edge effects is a term generally used to
describe habitat edges. For example, a forest edge is usually more open, bright, and windy
than a forest interior, and temperatures and humidity are more varied. Landscape ecology
is a science that examines the relationship between these spatial patterns and ecological
processes, such as species movement or survival.
Self-Help: You can refer to the sources below to help you further understand the
lesson.
Marten. G.G. 2008. Human Ecology: Basic Concepts for Sustainable Development.
Earthscan, USA
Botkin, D. and Keller, E. 2011. Environmental Science: Earth as a Living Planet. 8th Edition.
John Wiley and Sons, USA
Activity No. 5. Now that you have the most essential terms and concepts in the study of
biological diversity and invasions. Let us try to check your understanding on these terms
and concepts. In the space provided, identify biodiversity and invasions concepts
described in each of the following statements.
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Activity No. 5. Getting acquainted with the essential terms in studying biodiversity and
invasions, green revolution, genetic engineering as well biological interactions will not be
sufficient, what also matters is you should be able to identify and discuss how biological
diversity is affected by population movement, patterns, and community structure. Now, I
will require you to explain thoroughly your answers.
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Activity No. 5. Based on the definition of the most essential terms and concepts of
biological diversity and the learning exercises that you have done, please feel free to write
your arguments or lessons below.
1. ___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________
2. ___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
3. ___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
4. ___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
Q and A LIST
Do you have any questions for clarification?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
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KEYWORDS INDEX
Genetic Diversity Endangered species Adaptive radiation
Biological Evolution Threaten Founder effect
Keystone species DNA Migration
Vulnerable Indicator Geographic isolation
BIG PICTURE IN FOCUS: ULO -3. Explain how rocks and minerals are formed, weather and
climate patterns, and discuss air pollution sources, water pollution, use, and management.
In this section, the essential terms relevant to the study of geology and Earth's resources,
air pollution, water pollution, and the introduction of environmental are presented. Please
refer to the definition in case you will encounter difficulty in the understanding of
environmental science concepts.
1. Geology. An earth science concerned with the solid Earth, the rocks of which it is
composed, and the processes by which they change over time.
2.1. Geology can also include studying the solid features of any terrestrial planet
or natural satellite, such as Mars or the Moon.
2. Tectonics. The process that controls the structure and properties of the Earth's crust
and its evolution through time.
6. Weathering. The breaking down of rocks, soil, and minerals as well as wood and
artificial materials through contact with the Earth's atmosphere, water, and
biological organisms.
7. Hazards refer to any agent that can harm humans, property, or the environment.
7.1. Risk is defined as the probability that exposure to a hazard will lead to a
negative consequence, or more simply, a hazard poses no risk if there is no
exposure to that hazard.
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