Environmental Protection in the USA
There are many threats to wildlife. Let’s analyse some of them. Animals all over the world have been killed because their flesh, skins or body parts can be sold for money. Wolves, bears, rhinos, elephants and all types of wild cats have had prices on their heads for centuries. Unregulated trapping and hunting have brought many animals to the brink of extinction, and have pushed a few right out of existence. Sometimes wild animals are caught for use in medical research. Every year, many wild animals are caught and sold as pets. These animals are much happier and healthier living in the wild than they would be in your house. So take home a cat, a dog, or a hamster instead of an animal that has been removed from its natural environment. Welcome to the USA! Today one of the greatest threats to wild animals is the destruction of their habitats. Like people, animals need food to eat, water to drink and places to live and raise their young. When we remove the plant life or pollute the water of any area, we are destroying the homes of wild animals. You already know about the air pollution caused by cars. Of course, that has a big effect on air quality for every creature on earth, including wild animals. But cars cause other problems for animals too: wildlife habitats are destroyed in order to build roads, and many wild creatures are killed by cars every year. When people misuse the land, they drive out of wildlife. In many parts of the world, large areas that were bushlands or forests have been cleared for crops or for pasture. As a result of man’s thoughtless activity, some areas have even become deserts. People have polluted other regions with petroleum products or toxic chemicals like some pesticides. We need to find ways to use the land to benefit both humans and wild animals. Sometimes people damage wild places just by visiting them too much. Too many feet trample plant life, too many hands touch delicate organisms, and too often we leave waste and pollution behind. Sometimes we’ve got to set limits on how many people can visit a park in order to save its beauty and preserve it as wildlife habitat. People don’t even need guns to kill animals. They often kill wild animals through carelessness or by accident. For example, fire on land or oil in the water can destroy wildlife for miles around. Animals die after eating plastic trash or becoming entangled in discarded plastic containers, nets, or fishing lines. A cigarette thrown out of a car window, a plastic container, or a ship leaking oil can be a lethal weapon. We’ve got to be more careful. For many wild animals time is running out – if we don’t save them now, they will disappear forever. Some animals are already gone. It’s too late for us to protect the Tosmanian wolf, an unusual animal from Australia – it became extinct in the 1930s. People have destroyed as many habitats and caused the extinction of as many animals as any natural disaster ever has. We humans have cut down forests, ploughed away grasslands, filled in wetlands, and destroyed a great part of the soil. Now we are realizing just how destructive we have been. Today it’s up to us to save what’s left of the wildlife on our planet. How can we protect wild animals? It all begins with getting to know them and understanding what they need in order to live in a natural environment. Some animals need a lot of territory, others eat only one type of food, and still others change their habits with the seasons. Many animals are protected by special laws and regulations. For example, in the US bald eagles were very endangered just a few decades ago. Now it’s illegal to hunt bald eagles and it’s even against the law to own their feathers. The US also banned the use of DDT, a pesticide that prevented eagle eggs from hatching. These laws are working – the number of bald eagles grows each year. Welcome to the USA! In the past, zoos have sometimes been prisons where wild animals were kept behind bars. But today, modern zoos are working hard to provide more natural environments for their animals. Some also breed endangered animals with the hope of returning some of these rare animals to their natural environment one day. We humans are the most powerful creatures on our planet. The future of all plants and animals is in our hands! Environment pollution problem is paid much attention to in the USA. Different environmentalists and environmental societies, like Wilderness Society, try to improve the situation. The level of damage to the forests in the USA is really high. The construction of new roads and the need of wood influenced the cuttings of large areas of forest. As a result some rare species of animals, and some plants can disappear. For example, the pacific yew, containing a cancer-fighting compound. American environmentalists are also disturbed about the problem of global warming. They pay much attention to the research in this sphere. Global warming is the result of air pollution by different gases. Together with the gases, destroying the ozone layer, it influences the patterns of weather. Many USA universities investigate these problems. The pollution of Lake Erie, one of the Great Lakes, and the problem of acid rains that threatened many forests, made the media start a campaign against industrial pollution. All of the states have adopted their own laws; some banned throw-away bottles, or use of phosphates in soaps, or industrial dumping of wastes. By 1986 smoking in public had been restricted. There also exist public societies, whose aim is to attract public’s attention to the most important environmental problems. Some of them, for example, «Pals of the Planet», publish the materials of how to save the seas from pollution. The «Greenpeace» organization, which appeared in 1971, is one of the leading environmental organizations in the USA and in the world. Its numerous actions of protest against water and air pollution, its program «Water for Life», started in the USA, help our planet to survive. Public attention to the problems of pollution has now become a part of American life. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or sometimes USEPA) is an agency of the federal government of the United States charged with protecting human health and the environment, by writing and enforcing regulations based on laws passed by Congress.[2] The EPA was proposed by President Richard Nixon and began operation on December 2, 1970, after Nixon submitted a reorganization plan to Congress and it was ratified by committee hearings in the House and Senate.[3] The agency is led by its Administrator, who is appointed by the president and approved by Congress. The current administrator is Lisa P. Jackson. The EPA is not a Cabinet department, but the administrator is normally given cabinet rank. The agency has approximately 17,000 full-time employees. On July 9, 1970, citing rising concerns over environmental protection and conservation, President Richard Nixon transmitted Reorganization Plan No. 3 to the United States Congress by executive order, creating the EPA as a single, independent Welcome to the USA! agency from a number of smaller arms of different federal agencies. Prior to the establishment of the EPA, the federal government was not structured to comprehensively regulate environmental pollutants. The EPA began regulating greenhouse gases (GHGs) from mobile and stationary sources of air pollution under the Clean Air Act (CAA) for the first time on January 2, 2011. Standards for mobile sources have been established pursuant to Section 202 of the CAA, and GHGs from stationary sources are controlled under the authority of Part C of Title I of the Act.
Vocabulary: 1) ban [bæn] - запрещать 2) benefit ['benɪfɪt] – приносить пользу 3) breed [bri:d] - разводить 4) brink [brɪŋk] – грань, край 5) creature ['kri:ʧə] – живое существо 6) disaster [dɪ'zɑːstə] - бедствие 7) endanger [ɪn'deɪnʤə] – подвергать опасности 8) entangle [ɪn'tæŋgl] – запутывать, поймать в ловушку 9) flesh [fleʃ] - мясо 10)habitat ['hæbɪtæt] – среда, место обитания 11)hamster ['hæmstə] - хомяк 12) pesticide ['pestɪsaɪd] – химическое вещество 13) plough [plau] - пахать 14) pollute [pə'lu:t] - загрязнять 15) pollution [pə'lu:ʃ(ə)n] - загрязнение 16) threat [θret] - угроза 17) trample ['træmpl] - топтать 18) trap [træp] – ловить в ловушки, капканы 19) trash [træʃ] - хлам 20) waste [weɪst] – отходы, отбросы
Welcome to the USA! Presentations: 1) Natural wonders in Hawaii
An underwater volcano in Hawaii
2)The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (Alaska)
The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) Welcome to the USA!
Check yourself: 1) What are the separate parts of the USA? 2) What territory does the USA occupy? 3) What waters is the USA washed by? 4) What countries does the USA border on? 5) Where is Alaska situated? 6) Where is Hawaii situated? 7) What is the district of Columbia? 8) What can be said about the population of the USA? 9) What is the relief of the United States like? 10) What does the Cordillera mountain system consist of? 11) What is the highest peak of the Cordilleras? Where is it? 12) Where are the Cascade Mountains and the Sierra Nevada? 13) Describe the Pacific Coastal Plain. 14) What can be said of the mountains in Alaska? 15) What do you know about the White mountain in Hawaii? 16) What are the major rivers in the USA? 17) What do you know of the hydrology of Alaska? 18) What are the major rivers in Hawaii? 19) Why are the rivers in the west of the USA unsuitable for navigation? 20) Where are the Great Zones situated? 21) What do you know of the climate of the USA? 22) What influences the climate of the USA? 23) Why is it warm in the west of the country? 24) Where is a dry region? 25) Why do terrible hurricanes happen to come down to the Southern coast? 26) What affected flora and fauna of the USA? 27) Who was the first to describe the flora of the New World? 28) What does the word “coyote” mean? 29) Why were many animals destroyed? 30) What are the effects of the environment pollution on wildlife?
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