Chapter 9 Sustaining Biodiversity
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Transcript Chapter 9 Sustaining Biodiversity
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Chapter 9 Sustaining
Biodiversity
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What Role do Humans Play in
Extinction?
Extinctions:
Biological – no longer exist…anywhere
Can cause secondary extinction – weakened
ecosystem – extinction of some species that had
strong ties with one deceased
Background extinction rate – low rate
1/million species = 0.0001%
Allowed for balance between extinction and
formation of new species
Mass extinction – many in a short time
Recovery can happen, but takes millions of years
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What Role do Humans Play in
Extinction?
Human
Activities
2005 Millennium assessment – humans have taken
over or disturbed 50-80% of land surfaces
Polluted or disturbed about ½ of surface waters
Extinction
Rates Rising Rapidly
Current rate is 1,000 x times background rate
Rate due to habitat loss, climate change, etc could rise
to 10,000 times the background rate = 1% extinction
About 10,000 species/year for every 1million sp
¼- ½ of current animal & plant species extinct by
end of century
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What Role do Humans Play in
Extinction?
Extinction
Rates
Rate of loss and extent of biodiversity loss increase
during next 50-100 years – due to human growth
Projected rates are higher in areas with highly
endangered centers of biodiversity
Biodiversity hot-spots
We are eliminating, degrading, fragmenting, and
simplifying many biologically diverse enviro
Limiting the long-term recovery – reducing rate of
speciation
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What Role do Humans Play in
Extinction?
Endangered
and threatened species smoke alarms
Endangered species – so few survivors species soon
become extinct
Threatened/vulnerable – enough for short term, but
likely to become endangered
IUCN
(international union for the conservation of
nature)
2009 1370 listed as endangered/threatened for ESA
Behavioral
characteristics – make more prone to
extinction pg 194 fig 9-3
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Passenger Pigeon
Early
By
1800’s very abundant
1900 gone
Habitat loss – forests cleared
Uncontrolled commercial hunting/easy to kill
Good eats, feathers good pillows
Easy targets
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WHY should we care about rising
rate of extinction
Species
vital part of natural capital
Extinction, but speciation (form new ones) replaces at
a natural background extinction rate
So why care?
Vital part of earth’s life support system – natural
resources and services – keep us alive
EX pollination, chemical cycling, upset ecosystem
Economics – food, fuel, lumber, medicines (62% for
prospectors in rainforests)
Ecotourism – more money alive/intact than dead
Will take longer to recover
Right to exist
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How do we accelerate extinction
HIPPCO
Habitat destruction, degradation, fragmentation
Invasive species
Population growth and increasing use of resources
Pollution
Climate change
Overexploitation
Greatest
threat is habitat destruction, degradation,
and fragmentation
Deforestation, destruction/degradation of coral reefs
and wetlands, plowing grasslands
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How accelerate
Habitat
fragmentation – large intact areas, divided
Block migration routes
Decrease tree cover
Divide populations into too small of species pockets
Vulnerability to normal pressures
Natural
Use
parks/reserves are habitat islands
theory of island biogeography to help
understand role of fragmentation and species
extinction
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How Accelerate
98%
of US food supply – corn, wheat, rice, cattle,
poultry; was introduced
In
new habitat
Face no natural predators, competitors, parasites, or
pathogens
Crowd-out populations of native species – ecological
disruptions, health problems, economic loss
US FW 40% of species listed as endangered are due
to invasive species
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How Accelerate
Kudzu
vine
Imported from Japan and planted to control soil
erosion
Literally takes over
Can use useful – starch in beverages, confections,
herbal remedies
All parts are edible
Fiber could be used to replace trees in paper
Disrupt
ecosystems – try many approaches –
typically not much works
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Prevention for Invasives
Research
Ground
surveys and tracking
International
Cargo
treaties to ban transfer
ships dump ballast water
Educate
public
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How accelerate
Pop growth and excessive and wasteful consumption of
resources =
increased eco footprint =
eliminated, degraded, and fragmented areas of wildlife
Pollution
Pesticides
Annually kill 1/5th of honeybee colonies (pollinate 1/3rd
of crops)
Kill ~67 millin birds
6-14 million fish
DDT 50’s -70s especially harmed bald eagle
Biomagnification
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How accelerate
Read
through case studies for
honeybees,
illegal killing and selling
Birds
PAY
ATTENTION TO STATS and #s
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How Can we Protect
Convention
on International Trade in Endangered
Species (CITES)
US
Endangered Species Act – what’s within the
reading and the science Focus
Establish
wildlife refuges and protected areas
Especially vital for migratory waterfoul
Gene
Banks, Botanical Gardens
Zoos/Aquariums
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Endangered Species Act
It’s
not a failure
Species listed only when in serious danger
Takes decades for most species to become
endangered/threatened, so it can take decades to
come back
~ ½ of listed species are stable or improving and 99%
of protected species are still surviving
Small budget can do a lot
Recommend to strengthen and modify
Increase funding
Develop recovery plans
Look carefully at the core of its habitat for protection
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Precautionary Principle
To
avoid causing more extinctions and more loss of
biodiversity
If
evidence shows it can harm, precautionary
measure to prevent or reduce
Better safe than sorry
Look
at 3 important questions:
How do we allocate limited resources between
protecting species and protecting habitats?
How do we decide which species should get more
attention?
How do we determine which habitat areas are most
critical to protect