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Environmental (and Cultural) Benefits
Henry Bakker, Field Sparrow Farms

Feb 24. 2014
Sustainability
sustain: provide with the basic necessities required to
support or preserve life livelihood, or existence;
maintain or keep (an action or process) going
continuously
sustainable: “Ecology” (esp. of development) that
conserves an ecological balance by avoiding depletion
of natural resources; that may be maintained, esp. at a
particular level
-

Oxford Canadian Dictionary
Our Common Future

Our Common Future, published in 1987 by the
World Commission on Environment and
Development (the Brundtland Commission),
defined it as development that “seeks to meet the
needs and aspirations of the present without
compromising the ability to meet those of the
future.”
- Oxford Concise Dictionary of Ecology
Photosynthesis = Energy
There are many different types of ecosystem but the
foundation of all of them, and therefore the basis
for all life on earth, is photosynthesis.
It is the only way that energy is introduced into
the system…Within an individual ecosystem
photosynthesizers (such as plants, trees and
grasses) provide the basic energy input.
Responsible grazing seeks to maximize solar
collection through optimal plant management.
The first law of thermodynamics

Energy is conserved, that is to say, indestructible. There
is always the same total amount of energy in the
universe. It can be neither created, nor destroyed; it just
changes form, such as from chemical energy in fuel, to
heat. Energy is simply available or unavailable for use.
The second law of thermodynamics

The entropy of the universe tends to a maximum.
Entropy is the measure of the degree of disorder in a
system. As entropy increases systems evolve from a
state of relative order to one of disorder. Entropy can
also be thought of as a measure of the amount of
unavailable energy in a system.
Recycling

The fact that the earth is a closed system means
that nothing can get out. All waste products must
go somewhere.
The recycling of the materials necessary for life
is an essential function of all ecosystems and
the other physical and chemical processes on
earth.
Soil
Soil is the product of an ecosystem – it has been
created by living plants and animals and it continues
to rely on them to remain fertile and productive.
Fertility is built up and maintained as an active
process through the interaction of the plant cover,
the existing soil, the work of decomposers and other
environmental factors such as rainfall and
temperature. All of these processes make the
various types of soil found in different parts of the
globe one of the most complex living systems on
earth.
A Fragile Resource

Although soils are created over time this process is, on a
human timescale, so slow that the soil is in effect a nonrenewable resource. It is also a highly fragile one.
Ecosystems develop naturally in a way that protects the soil
on which they depend. Once the trees and plants of an
ecosystem are destroyed or badly damaged then the
underlying soil is very quickly subjected to severe strain and
can be easily destroyed or eroded away by wind and rain
leaving only a degraded remnant.
When was this written?

“One thing is sure. The earth is now more cultivated
and developed than ever before. There is more
farming with pure force, swamps are drying up, and
cities are springing up on unprecedented scale.
We’ve become a burden to our planet. Resources
are becoming scarce, and soon nature will no longer
be able to satisfy our needs.”
- Tertullian, Roman theologian, 200 A.D.
Here’s Another One…
“What now remains compared with what then existed is like the
skeleton of a sick man, all the fat and soft earth having wasted
away, and only the bare framework of the land being left… there
are some mountains which now have nothing but food for bees,
but they had trees not very long ago… there were many lofty
trees of cultivated species and… boundless pasturage for flocks.
Moreover, it was enriched by the yearly rains from Zeus, which
were not lost to it, as now, by flowing from the bare land into the
sea; but the soil it had was deep, and therein it received the
water, storing it up in the retentive loamy soil, and… provided all
the various districts with abundant supplies of springwaters and
streams, whereof the shrines still remain even now, at the spots
where the fountains formerly existed.”

- Plato, Critias, ca. 340 BC
Hillside in Jordan
The Ancient Roman City of Cuicul
“Scrawny” sheep graze near the ruins
Timgad – another Roman city of North Africa
Abandoned American farm house
Bare Capped Soil - Zimbabwe
6 months later – 200 cattle & 100 goats
rotating through a new area each day
Two Years Later
Our Task…
“The most important task in all human history has been
to find a way of extracting from the different ecosystems
in which people have lived enough resources for
maintaining life – food, clothing, shelter, energy and
other material goods. Inevitably this has meant
intervening in natural ecosystems. The problem for
human societies has been to balance their various
demands against the ability of the ecosystems to
withstand the resulting pressures.”
- Clive Ponting, from A Green History of the
World: The Environment and the Collapse of Great
Civilizations

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Environmental (and Cultural) Benefits

  • 1. Environmental (and Cultural) Benefits Henry Bakker, Field Sparrow Farms Feb 24. 2014
  • 2. Sustainability sustain: provide with the basic necessities required to support or preserve life livelihood, or existence; maintain or keep (an action or process) going continuously sustainable: “Ecology” (esp. of development) that conserves an ecological balance by avoiding depletion of natural resources; that may be maintained, esp. at a particular level - Oxford Canadian Dictionary
  • 3. Our Common Future Our Common Future, published in 1987 by the World Commission on Environment and Development (the Brundtland Commission), defined it as development that “seeks to meet the needs and aspirations of the present without compromising the ability to meet those of the future.” - Oxford Concise Dictionary of Ecology
  • 4. Photosynthesis = Energy There are many different types of ecosystem but the foundation of all of them, and therefore the basis for all life on earth, is photosynthesis. It is the only way that energy is introduced into the system…Within an individual ecosystem photosynthesizers (such as plants, trees and grasses) provide the basic energy input. Responsible grazing seeks to maximize solar collection through optimal plant management.
  • 5. The first law of thermodynamics Energy is conserved, that is to say, indestructible. There is always the same total amount of energy in the universe. It can be neither created, nor destroyed; it just changes form, such as from chemical energy in fuel, to heat. Energy is simply available or unavailable for use.
  • 6. The second law of thermodynamics The entropy of the universe tends to a maximum. Entropy is the measure of the degree of disorder in a system. As entropy increases systems evolve from a state of relative order to one of disorder. Entropy can also be thought of as a measure of the amount of unavailable energy in a system.
  • 7. Recycling The fact that the earth is a closed system means that nothing can get out. All waste products must go somewhere. The recycling of the materials necessary for life is an essential function of all ecosystems and the other physical and chemical processes on earth.
  • 8. Soil Soil is the product of an ecosystem – it has been created by living plants and animals and it continues to rely on them to remain fertile and productive. Fertility is built up and maintained as an active process through the interaction of the plant cover, the existing soil, the work of decomposers and other environmental factors such as rainfall and temperature. All of these processes make the various types of soil found in different parts of the globe one of the most complex living systems on earth.
  • 9. A Fragile Resource Although soils are created over time this process is, on a human timescale, so slow that the soil is in effect a nonrenewable resource. It is also a highly fragile one. Ecosystems develop naturally in a way that protects the soil on which they depend. Once the trees and plants of an ecosystem are destroyed or badly damaged then the underlying soil is very quickly subjected to severe strain and can be easily destroyed or eroded away by wind and rain leaving only a degraded remnant.
  • 10. When was this written? “One thing is sure. The earth is now more cultivated and developed than ever before. There is more farming with pure force, swamps are drying up, and cities are springing up on unprecedented scale. We’ve become a burden to our planet. Resources are becoming scarce, and soon nature will no longer be able to satisfy our needs.” - Tertullian, Roman theologian, 200 A.D.
  • 11. Here’s Another One… “What now remains compared with what then existed is like the skeleton of a sick man, all the fat and soft earth having wasted away, and only the bare framework of the land being left… there are some mountains which now have nothing but food for bees, but they had trees not very long ago… there were many lofty trees of cultivated species and… boundless pasturage for flocks. Moreover, it was enriched by the yearly rains from Zeus, which were not lost to it, as now, by flowing from the bare land into the sea; but the soil it had was deep, and therein it received the water, storing it up in the retentive loamy soil, and… provided all the various districts with abundant supplies of springwaters and streams, whereof the shrines still remain even now, at the spots where the fountains formerly existed.” - Plato, Critias, ca. 340 BC
  • 13. The Ancient Roman City of Cuicul
  • 14. “Scrawny” sheep graze near the ruins
  • 15. Timgad – another Roman city of North Africa
  • 17. Bare Capped Soil - Zimbabwe
  • 18. 6 months later – 200 cattle & 100 goats rotating through a new area each day
  • 20. Our Task… “The most important task in all human history has been to find a way of extracting from the different ecosystems in which people have lived enough resources for maintaining life – food, clothing, shelter, energy and other material goods. Inevitably this has meant intervening in natural ecosystems. The problem for human societies has been to balance their various demands against the ability of the ecosystems to withstand the resulting pressures.” - Clive Ponting, from A Green History of the World: The Environment and the Collapse of Great Civilizations