Transcript Chapter 10
Sustaining Terrestrial Biodiversity:
The Ecosystem Approach
Chapter 10
Standard 8: Students will know how water resources are used globally.
Standard 29: Students will understand the environmental impact of fishing.
Standard 26: Students will know the major types of public and federal lands.
Standard 40: Students will know the causes and consequences of the loss of biodiversity.
Core Case Study: Reintroducing
Gray Wolves to Yellowstone
Around 1800
1850–1900: decline due to
human activity
U.S. Endangered Species Act:
1973
1995–1996: relocation of gray
wolves to Yellowstone Park
2008: Gray wolf no longer
protected
What do you think would be the biggest threats
to forest ecosystems?
What Are the Major Threats
to Forest Ecosystems?
Unsustainable cutting
Burning
Diseases
Insects
Tropical deforestation
Forests Vary in Their Make-Up,
Age, and Origins
Old-growth or primary forest
• Uncut or regenerated primary forest not disturbed
by human activity or natural disaster for more
than 200 years
• 36% of world’s forests
Oldgrowth European
Beech forest
in Biogradska
Gora National
Park, Montenegr
o
Coast Redwoods in old-growth forest inMuir Woods
National Monument, Marin County, California.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bc/Biogradska_suma.jpg/300px-Biogradska_suma.jpg
Forests Vary in Their Make-Up,
Age, and Origins
Second-growth
forest: trees
resulting from
secondary
ecological
succession
• 60% of world’s
forests
http://www.seattle.gov/util/groups/public/@spu/documents/we
bproductionfile/02_013762.jpg
Fig. 10-3a, p. 216
Forests Vary in Their Make-Up,
Age, and Origins
Tree plantation,
tree farm or
commercial
forest: managed
tract of uniformly
aged trees
• 4% of world’s
forests
• May supply
most of the
industrial wood
in the future
A pine plantation in the United States. Tree
plantations are usually easily distinguished
from natural forests by the trees being
planted in straight lines.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/63/Pinus_ta
eda_plantation.jpg/220px-Pinus_taeda_plantation.jpg
Fig. 10-4, p. 217
Science Focus: Putting a Price Tag on
Nature’s Ecological Services
Forests valued for ecological services
•
•
•
•
•
•
Nutrient cycling
Climate regulation
Erosion control
Waste treatment
Recreation
Raw materials
$4.7 Trillion per year
Unsustainable Logging is a Major Threat
to Forest Ecosystems
Increased erosion
Sediment runoff into
waterways
Habitat fragmentation
Loss of biodiversity
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/63LjuJ2tybA/Tyqp8s2MyiI/AAAAAAAAITU/pK_-JHBUUE/s1600/000.jpeg
Unsustainable Logging is a Major Threat
to Forest Ecosystems
Major tree harvesting methods:
• Selective cutting: intermediate aged or mature
trees in an uneven-aged forest are cut singly or in
small groups
• Clear-cutting: all trees removed from an area
• Strip cutting: clear cutting a strip of trees along
the contour of the land within a corridor narrow
enough to allow natural regeneration within a few
years
TRADE-OFFS
Clear-Cutting Forests
Advantages
Disadvantages
Higher timber
yields
Reduces
biodiversity
Maximum profits
in shortest time
Destroys and
fragments wildlife
habitats
Can reforest with
fast-growing trees
Good for tree
species needing
full or moderate
sunlight
Increases water
pollution, flooding,
and erosion on
steep slopes
Eliminates most
recreational value
Fig. 10-8, p. 220
Invasion
• Nonnative
pests
• Disease
• Wildlife
species
Insects and Climate Change Can
Threaten Forest Ecosystems
Introduction of foreign diseases and insects
• Accidental
• Deliberate
Global warming
•
•
•
•
Rising temperatures
Trees more susceptible to diseases and pests
Drier forests: more fires
More greenhouse gases
Fire Can Threaten Forest Ecosystems
Surface fires
• Usually burn leaf litter and undergrowth
• May provide food in the form of vegetation that
sprouts after fire
http://www.nps.gov/ngpfire/Photos/jeca_ht_08.JPG
Fire Can Threaten Forest Ecosystems
Crown fires
• Extremely hot: burns whole trees
• Kill wildlife
• Increase soil erosion
http://www.meto.umd.edu/~zli/Info/crown_firecopy%20copy.jpg
We Have Cut Down Almost Half
of the World’s Forests
Deforestation
• Tropical forests
• Especially in Latin America, Indonesia, and Africa
• Boreal forests
http://milwaukeecountyfirst.com/wpcontent/uploads/2010/05/deforestati
on.jpg
• Especially in Alaska, Canada, Scandinavia, and
Russia
http://media.treehugger.com/assets/images/2013/05/defore
station_in_the_amazon.jpg.662x0_q100_crop-scale.jpg
Fig. 10-12, p. 223
Case Study: Many Cleared Forests in the
United States Have Grown Back
Forests of the eastern United States decimated
between 1620 and 1920
Grown back naturally through secondary
ecological succession
Biologically simplified tree plantations reduce
biodiversity
NATURAL CAPITAL
DEGRADATION
Major Causes of the Destruction and Degradation of Tropical Forests
Basic Causes
Secondary Causes
• Not valuing ecological services
• Crop and timber exports
• Government policies
• Poverty
• Population growth
Cattle
ranching
• Roads
• Fires
• Settler farming
• Cash crops
Tree
plantations
• Cattle ranching
• Logging
• Tree plantations
Logging
Cash crops
Settler
farming
Roads
Fires
Fig. 10-15, p. 225
Tropical Forests are Disappearing
Rapidly
Majority of loss since 1950
Brazil and Indonesia tropical forest loss
Role of deforestation in species’ extinction
http://www.foodbeautylove.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Rainforest-Deforestation.jpg
http://mongabay-images.s3.amazonaws.com/13/AMAZON-DEFORESTATION-full.jpg
How Should We Manage and
Sustain Forests
Emphasize the economic value of their
ecological services
Protect old-growth forests
Harvest trees no faster than they are
replenished
Use sustainable substitute resources.
Fig. 10-17, p. 227
We Can Improve the Management
of Forest Fires
The Smokey Bear educational
campaign
Prescribed fires
Allow fires on public lands to burn
Protect structures in fire-prone areas
Thin forests in fire-prone areas
Smokey the Bear Campaign
We Can Improve the Management
of Forest Fires
2003 Healthy Forests Restoration Act
• Allows timber companies to cut down
economically valuable medium size and large
trees in 71% of the country’s national forests in
return for clearing away smaller, more fire prone
trees and underbrush
• Companies NOT required to do prescribed burns
• Thinning projects exempt from environmental
review
• Criticized for NOT following known management
techniques
Science Focus: Certifying Sustainably
Grown Timber
Collins Pine
• Owns and manages protective timberland
Forest Stewardship Council
• Nonprofit
• Developed list of environmentally sound practices
• Certifies timber and products
We Can Reduce the Demand for
Harvested Trees
Up to 60% of the wood used in the U.S. is
wasted unnecessarily
Improve the efficiency of wood use
Make tree-free paper
• Rice straw used in China
• Kenaf
• Hemp
Case Study: Deforestation and the
Fuelwood Crisis
Possible solutions
• Establish small plantations of fast-growing
fuelwood trees and shrubs
• Burn wood more efficiently
• Solar or wind-generated electricity
Haiti: ecological disaster: only 2% of it’s land is
left forested, soils have eroded
South Korea: model for successful reforestation
Governments and Individuals Can Act
to Reduce Tropical Deforestation
Reduce fuelwood demand
Practice small-scale sustainable agriculture and
forestry in tropical forest
Debt-for-nature swaps
Conservation concessions
Use gentler logging methods
Buy certified lumber and wood products
Individuals Matter: Wangari Maathari and
Kenya’s Green Belt Movement
Green Belt Movement:
1977
• Self-help group of
women in Kenya
• Women paid for each
seedling planted that
survives
Nobel Peace Prize: 2004
Pygmy tribes
in Africa
have been
given GPS
units to help
them fight
logging and
poaching in
their area
http://www.newscien
tist.com/blogs/onepe
rcent/2012/02/21/1.j
pg
http://comingworldwar3.files.
wordpress.com/2010/06/bre
e-keyton-and-the-pygmies600x450.jpg
How Should We Manage and
Sustain Grasslands
Concept 10-3 We can sustain the productivity
of grasslands by controlling the number and
distribution of grazing livestock and restoring
degraded grasslands.
Some Rangelands Are Overgrazed
Important ecological services of grasslands
•
•
•
•
Soil formation
Erosion control
Nutrient cycling
Storage of atmospheric carbon dioxide in
biomass
• Maintenance of diversity
Some Rangelands are Overgrazed
Overgrazing of rangelands
•
•
•
•
Reduces grass cover
Leads to erosion of soil by water and wind
Soil becomes compacted
Enhances invasion of plant species that cattle
won’t eat
Fig. 10-20, p. 232
Fig. 10-21a, p. 233
We Can Manage Rangelands More
Sustainably
Rotational grazing
Suppress growth of invasive species
•
•
•
•
Herbicides
Mechanical removal
Controlled burning
Controlled short-term trampling
We Can Manage Rangelands More
Sustainably
Replant barren areas
Apply fertilizer
Reduce soil erosion
Fig. 10-21b, p. 233
Rangeland Management Purposes
Produces forage for livestock
Habitat for many wildlife species
Protects soil from erosion
Germplasm bank
• Germplasm: The genetic material, especially its specific
molecular and chemical constitution, that carries the
inherited characteristics of an organism from one
generation to the next by means of the germ cells
Purifies and enhances the environment
Recreation
Brainstorm with a partner, groups who support each
purpose and why – Fill in worksheet
Case Study: Grazing and Urban
Development the American West
American southwest: population surge since
1980
Land trust groups: limit land development
Reduce the harmful environmental impact of
herds
• Rotate cattle away from riparian areas
• Use less fertilizers and pesticides
• Operate ranch more economically
10-4 How Should We Manage and Sustain
Parks and Natural Reserves?
Concept 10-4 Sustaining biodiversity will
require protecting much more of the earth’s
remaining undisturbed land area as parks and
nature reserves.
National Parks Face Many Environmental
Threats
Worldwide: 1100 major national parks
Parks in developing countries
• Greatest biodiversity
• 1% protected against
• Illegal animal poaching
• Illegal logging and mining
Fig. 10-23, p. 236
Case Study: Stresses on U.S.
Public Parks
58 Major national parks in the U.S.
Biggest problem may be popularity
•
•
•
•
Noise
Congestion
Pollution
Damage or destruction to vegetation and wildlife
Repairs needed to trails and buildings
Science Focus: Effects of Reintroducing the
Gray Wolf to Yellowstone National Park
Gray wolves prey on elk and push them to a
higher elevation
• Regrowth of aspen, cottonwoods, and willows
• Increased population of riparian songbirds
Reduced the number of coyotes
• Fewer attacks on cattle
Wolf pups susceptible to parvovirus carried by
dogs
Nature Reserves Occupy Only a Small
Part of the Earth’s Land
Conservationists’ goal: protect 20% of the
earth’s land
Cooperation between government and private
groups
Nature Conservancy
Eco-philanthropists
Developers and resource extractors opposition
Designing and Connecting Nature
Reserves
Large versus small reserves
The buffer zone concept
• United Nations: 529 biosphere reserves in 105
countries
Habitat corridors between isolated reserves
• Advantages
• Disadvantages
Case Study: Costa Rica—A Global
Conservation Leader
1963–1983: cleared much of the forest
1986–2006: forests grew from 26% to 51%
• Goal: to reduce net carbon dioxide emissions to
zero by 2021
Eight zoned megareserves
• Designed to sustain around 80% of Costa Rica’s
biodiversity
Protecting Wilderness Is an Important
Way to Preserve Biodiversity
Pros
Cons
Case Study: Controversy over Wilderness
Protection in the United States
Wilderness Act of 1964
How much of the United States is protected
land?
Roadless Rule
2005: end of roadless areas within the national
forest system
10-5 What is the Ecosystem Approach
to Sustaining Biodiversity? (1)
Concept 10-5A We can help sustain
biodiversity by identifying severely threatened
areas and protecting those with high plant
diversity and those where ecosystem services
are being impaired.
Concept 10-5B Sustaining biodiversity will
require a global effort to rehabilitate and restore
damaged ecosystems.
10-5 What is the Ecosystem Approach
to Sustaining Biodiversity? (2)
Concept 10-5C Humans dominate most of the
earth’s land, and preserving biodiversity will
require sharing as much of it as possible with
other species.
We Can Use a Four-Point Strategy
to Protect Ecosystems
Map global ecosystems; identify species
Locate and protect most endangered species
Restore degraded ecosystems
Development must be biodiversity-friendly
Are new laws needed?
Protecting Global Biodiversity Hot Spots
Is an Urgent Priority
1988: Norman Myers
• Identify biodiversity hot spots rich in plant species
Not sufficient public support and funding
Drawbacks of this approach
• May not be rich in animal diversity
• People may be displaced and/or lose access to
important resources
Fig. 10-26, p. 241
Fig. 10-27, p. 241
Case Study: A Biodiversity Hot Spot
in East Africa
Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania, Africa
• Highest concentration of endangered species on
earth
Threatened due to
• Killing of forests by farmers and loggers
• Hunting
• Fires
Protecting Ecosystem Services Is
Also an Urgent Priority
U.N. Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: 2005
• Identify key ecosystem services
• Human activities degrade or overuse 62% of the
earth’s natural services
Identify highly stressed life raft ecosystems
We Can Rehabilitate and Restore
Ecosystems That We Have Damaged (1)
Study how natural ecosystems recover
•
•
•
•
Restoration
Rehabilitation
Replacement
Creating artificial ecosystems
We Can Rehabilitate and Restore
Ecosystems That We Have Damaged (2)
How to carry out most forms of ecological
restoration and rehabilitation
•
•
•
•
Identify what caused the degradation
Stop the abuse
Reintroduce species, if possible
Protect from further degradation
Fig. 10-29, p. 245
Science Focus: Ecological Restoration of
a Tropical Dry Forest in Costa Rica
Guanacaste National Park restoration project
• Relinked to adjacent rain forest
• Bring in cattle and horses – aid in seed dispersal
• Local residents – actively involved
Will Restoration Encourage Further
Destruction?
Preventing ecosystem damage is cheaper than
restoration
About 5% of the earth’s land is preserved from
the effects of human activities
We Can Share Areas We Dominate With
Other Species
Win-Win Ecology: How Earth’s Species Can
Survive in the Midst of Human Enterprise, by
Michael L. Rozenweig, 2003
• Reconciliation or applied ecology
• Community-based conservation
•
•
•
•
•
Belize and the black howler monkeys
Protect vital insect pollinators
Bluebird protection with special housing boxes
Berlin, Germany: rooftop gardens
San Francisco: Golden Gate Park
Case Study: The Blackfoot Challenge—
Reconciliation Ecology in Action
1970s: Blackfoot River Valley in Montana
threatened by
• Poor mining, logging, and grazing practices
• Water and air pollution
• Unsustainable commercial and residential
development
Community meetings led to
• Weed-pulling parties
• Nesting structures for waterfowl
• Developed sustainable grazing systems