Learning about human impacts on natural resources and
biodiversity will draw on your understanding of ecosystems
and biogeochemical cycles (24.1, 24.4).
This chapter’s discussions of climate change and thinning
of the ozone layer will expand on your knowledge of the
carbon cycle (24.5).
Key ConCepts
LinKs to earLier ConCepts
Human Population Growth
Humans have sidestepped some
natural limits on population growth.
Soaring human population size has
led to many impacts on the natural
world. Sections 25.1–25.3
Global Climate Change
Warming of Earth’s lower atmo‑
sphere due to increases in green‑
house gases is changing climate
patterns. Sections 25.4–25.5
Impacts on Resources
and Biodiversity
Human activities and increasing
demand for natural resources are
creating pollution and straining
ecosystems in other ways. Sections
25.6–25.10
Top: © Darko Sikman/Shutterstock.com; Middle: © Cengage Learning;
Bottom: U.S. Navy photo by Chief Yeoman Alphanso Braggs
Seven billion humans make a lot of
trash. Stuff we toss out ends up everywhere—in huge landfills,
piled along roadsides, and washed up on beaches. But a planet
littered with garbage is just one of many impacts our species is
having on the biosphere. This chapter will help give you the tools
to think critically about human impacts on Earth’s environments.
Decisions we make today about climate change and other
environmental issues are likely to shape Earth’s ecosystems and
the quality of human life far into the future.
471
Human impaCts on
tHe BiospHere
25
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