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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. Man has long believed that his impact upon the earth's resources has no correlation with its ultimate degradation. From land to sea to the atmosphere above, the environment has forever been at the mercy of man's blatant disregard for its finite existence. A crystal clear way of understanding this damaging cycle is in Joseph E. Taylor, III's Making Salmon: An Environmental History of the Northwest Fisheries Crisis, which chronicles the detrimental impact man has had upon the salmon population in particular, as well as the overall environment of the Pacific Northwest fishing industry in general. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCSlmon.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
mans blatant disregard for its finite existence. A crystal clear way of understanding this damaging cycle is in Joseph E. Taylor, IIIs Making Salmon: An Environmental History of the
Northwest Fisheries Crisis, which chronicles the detrimental impact man has had upon the salmon population in particular, as well as the overall environment of the Pacific Northwest fishing industry in
general. Indeed, ancient man was expected to survive by means of hunting, fishing and gathering, however, it was the manner by which he exploited the salmon supply that initially catapulted
the Pacific Northwest fish industry into the dire situation that still exists today. From over fishing to environmental pollution to clear-cutting tree supplies, Taylor (2001) clearly illustrates how the
extent to which man has irreversibly impeded upon any hope for a solid salmon population is both grand and far-reaching. "Salmons importance as a staple was unmistakable, and it
has become a key factor in population estimates. Ecologists use the term carrying capacity to describe the upper population limit an environment can sustain. In the Oregon country
salmon seem to be the crucial factor determining human carrying capacity" (Taylor, 2001, pp. 17-18). One of the important scientific principles presented in the book is that of the
overall environmental degradation the entire series of events - from the Native Americans up through contemporary times - has caused the salmon population. For example, clear-cutting or deforestation removes
precious cover from the waters below, causing an increase in temperature and making it extremely difficult for the salmon to survive. Together with the need for soil erosion control
due mainly to mans degrading activities upon the land, Taylor (2001) pinpoints and expounds upon some of the most crucial aspects of why the salmon problem is forever perpetuated.
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