Biodiversity and HIPPO PowerPoint
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Transcript Biodiversity and HIPPO PowerPoint
Conserving Life
Biodiversity
The variety of life in an ecosystem.
Biodiversity increases as
you near the equator
3 most diverse biomes:
Coral Reef
Tropical Rainforest
Wetlands Marsh
Why is Biodiversity
important?
Beautiful and scenic
Good for our health and an ecosystem’s
health
(diet, medicines, and disease prevention)
Loss of biodiversity
Extinct species
A species once present on Earth but has
died out
Endangered species
A species in danger of becoming extinct.
http://webecoist.com/2008/11/03/strange-rare-bizarre-endangered-flowers-plants-and-trees/
Threatened species
A species likely to become endangered in
the near future.
What causes the loss of
biodiversity?
“HIPPO”
Habitat Loss
Invasive Species
Poaching
Pollution
Over population
by humans
1. Habitat Loss
Deforestation
Slash and burn
Makes soil more
fertile for farming
Nutrient poor soil
in rain forest
Negative Effects of
Deforestation
Loss of habitat – crowds out species
Increases levels of CO2 –
contributing to global warming
Encroachment
Slowly moving into a species’ habitat
Examples
Road building & farming and housing
development
2. Invasive Species
Species that are
introduced into an
environment they are not
originally from
Synonyms for exotic: alien,
feral, invasive, introduced
Cane Toads
Released on purpose to kill
cane beetles
Skin contains deadly toxins
Practically no predators
101 have turned into 200
million over 70 years
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/stor
y/RTGAM.20090326.wcane0326/BNStory/S
cience/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bart_vs._Australia
Fire Ants
Stowed away on ship to
Alabama
Sting feels like burn
Kills native insects
Killer Bees
More aggressive honey bees
Escaped from lab in Brazil
Kills native bee species
Non-harmful invasive
species
Wheat
Rice
Dogs
Cats
Horses
Pigs
Cows
Goats
How do they arrive?
Invasive species in FL
A Burmese
python
attempted
to eat an
alligator
http://www.biosecurity.govt.nz/enter
What’s the problem?
Crowd out native
species
No predators
Decreases
biodiversity
3. Poaching
Illegal hunting (killing)
OR
Illegally removing a species from its
habitat
Poached Species
Big Cats – Fur
Elephants – Ivory
Rhinoceros – Horns
Orangutans – Pets
Macaws – Pets
“In 2005 there were nearly 88,000
mammals, 1.3 million reptiles and 203
million fish imported illegally into the
United States.” -Reuters
Poaching
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=7513626
4. Pollution
Water Pollution
Air Pollution
Ground Pollution
Water Pollution
Pesticides
Pesticide Use
Pesticide= chemicals
used to kill a pest
(rodent, insect,
fungus, etc.)
Runoff with rainwater
puts it into local water
systems.
Disrupts aquatic food
chains
DDT
Pesticide used to kill mosquitoes
Blamed for decline in bird of prey
populations
Fish in polluted water eaten by birds
Travels up the food chain
Top predators (eagles, peregrine falcons)
affected most
These birds lay eggs with thin shells
U.S. banned DDT in 1972
DDT still used in tropical locations to fight
malaria
Some oppose ban due to DDT’s ability to
fight malaria
Fertilizer Use
Runoff into
lakes
Causes rapid
algae growth
(algae bloom)
Algae blocks sunlight and….
Plants die (less oxygen)
Decomposers break down dead
plants (& use up oxygen)
No oxygen available to other
animals and they “suffocate”
Mercury
Mercury released into the air when burned,
and mixes with rainfall to get into the water.
Found in high quantities in fish
Can damage nervous and reproductive
systems (Pregnant women and young kids
at highest risk)
Hatters used mercury to
shape felt hats and often
were poisoned. “Mad as a
Hatter” references this.
Mercury
can
accumulate
in the food
chain.
Mercury is
often
combined
with other
metals for
fillings
(ADA says
this is safe)
Air Pollution
Pollutants released into air usually from
burning fossil fuels
Air Pollution causes…
Global warming
Ozone depletion
Acid Rain
Carbon Monoxide
poisoning
Ground Pollution
Soil becomes
polluted when air
pollutants drift to the
ground or when water
leaves pollutants
behind as it flows
through the soil.
5. Over Population of
Humans
Population numbers
Overpopulation
As more humans are added to our
planet, the demand for natural resources
(for energy, food and shelter) increases
and more land is cleared for
development.