🌎 Human Impact on Ecosystems
Big Idea: Humans are nature's most powerful change-makers 🐂 — we alter ecosystems faster and on a bigger scale than most natural events. This often reduces biodiversity and makes ecosystems less stable.
Why do humans have such a strong impact?
Imagine if one species could bulldoze forests, drain lakes, and ship animals across oceans — that's us!
- Population explosion: 1 billion (1800) → 8 billion (2024) — more people = more demand
- Resource hunger: We consume more per person than ever (food, energy, goods)
- Super technology: Machines let us change landscapes in days, not centuries
- Global trade: We move species, diseases, and pollution worldwide in hours
Human impacts are fast (years, not millennia), widespread (global), and long-lasting (some damage takes centuries to fix).
Human impacts on food webs
Food webs work because energy moves from plants (producers) to animals and other consumers. Human activities disrupt food webs when they reduce how much energy enters the web or interrupt how energy is passed between organisms.
Direct vs indirect human impacts: Some human impacts disrupt food webs directly by removing organisms or energy. Other impacts act indirectly by changing conditions or species interactions, which affects how energy moves through the system.
🚨 Core human impacts on food webs (direct)
- Habitat destruction – removes plants (producers), so less energy enters the food web.
- Overexploitation – removes organisms (animals, fish, or plants) faster than they can be replaced, interrupting energy transfer between trophic levels.
- Pollution – damages or kills organisms, reducing the amount of energy they can pass on.
➕ Other human impacts on ecosystems (indirect)
- Invasive species – change who eats whom by outcompeting or preying on native species, redirecting energy through new pathways.
- Climate change – alters temperature and rainfall patterns, making energy capture and transfer between trophic levels less efficient.
Exam tip: In exam questions about food webs, prioritise core (direct) impacts such as habitat destruction, overexploitation, or pollution, as these clearly disrupt energy flow. Indirect impacts should only be included if they are clearly linked to changes in energy transfer.