Silt Fusion Beads Resource Management
Our nation has many renewable natural resources, that in time have allowed us to build both a strong nation and economy. As the United States has grown throughout two hundred years, we have extracted natural resources through agriculture, forestry, mining, urban or industrial expansion, and other developments throughout the world. Through all of this extraction, we have ultimately affected the amount of wild lands that native plants and animals need for survival. Various groups have sought to approach a type of business management that will conserve and protect biodiversity. The ultimate goal of land management is to provide sustainable use of our environment’s natural resources. This means that the desired ecological conditions can and will be maintained over time, sustaining soils, air, water, and native plant and animal populations. Originally, the definition of an ecosystem excluded human beings. Time has shown that now both natural processes and human activity over time shape the diversity and productivity of any ecological system. An ecosystemâs approach recognizes that humans need to be including in sustaining the ecological environment. In order to view an ecosystems approach to business management from a biological perspective, four basic concepts are necessary for understanding ecological systems: space, time, diversity, and change. Ecosystems do not respect human, political, or social boundaries. Business management of an ecosystem occurs on all ecological scales. Furthermore, natural processes and human actions over time have shaped the diversity and productivity of ecological systems. It is important to remember that an ecosystems management is a perpetual process and management goals may not be reached during one’s lifetime or period of land ownership. However, the rewards will keep going and are virtually endless for generations and generations to come.