Biodiversity
Download
Report
Transcript Biodiversity
Biological Wealth
Goods and services provided by
biodiversity.
~$38 Trillion per year
Examples of Goods and Services
Gas, climate, and water regulation
Water supply
Erosion control
Soil formation
Pollination
Biological Wealth = $38 Trillion/Year
Biological control
Food production
Recreation
Raw materials
Nutrient cycling
Waste treatment
Two Kinds of Value
Instrumental: beneficial to humans
Sources for agriculture, forestry, aquaculture,
and animal husbandry
Recreational, aesthetic, and scientific value
Sources of medicine
Intrinsic: value for its own sake
Source for Agriculture: Wild or Cultivated?
Highly adaptable to changing
environments
Have numerous traits for resistance
Lack genetic vigor
Source for Agriculture: Wild or Cultivated?
High degree of genetic diversity
Represents the genetic bank
Need highly controlled environmental
conditions
High degree of genetic diversity
Need highly controlled environmental
conditions
Sources for Medicine: Vincristine
Sources of Medicine
Vincristine from rosy periwinkle cures leukemia.
Capoten from the venom of the Brazilian viper
controls high blood pressure.
Taxol from the bark of the pacific yew used to
treat ovarian, breast, and small-cell cancers.
Recreational, Aesthetic, and Scientific Value
Ecotourism: largest foreign exchangegenerating enterprise in many developing
countries
$104 billion spent on wildlife-related
recreation
$31 billion spent to observe, feed, or
photograph wildlife
Intrinsic Value
Value for Their Own Sake.
Why?
Philosophical/Moral issue.
Not a scientific issue.
Saving Wild Species
Game animals in the United States
Acts protecting endangered species
Past Wildlife Management Problems
Restoring the numbers of many game
animals, e.g., deer, elk, turkey
Passing laws to control the collection and
commercial exploitation of wildlife
Poaching and over hunting
Contemporary Wildlife Management
Problems
Road-killed animals
Population explosion of urban wildlife
Lack of natural predators
Wildlife as vectors for certain diseases
Pet predation by coyotes
Changed societal attitudes towards animals
Acts Protecting Endangered Species
Lacey Act: forbids interstate commerce of
illegally killed wildlife
Endangered Species Act (ESA): protects
endangered and threatened species
Species at Risk: United States
Total endangered U.S. species = 987 (388
animals, 599 plants)
Threatened U.S. species = 276 (129
animals, 147 plants)
The Status of U.S. Species
Causes of Animal Extinctions
Reasons for Biodiversity Decline
Habitat alterations
Conversions
Fragmentation
Simplification
Reasons for Biodiversity Decline
Pollution
Examples
Acid Rain
Caused by combustion of fossil fuels
10% of lakes in eastern US affected
DDT
DDT used to kill insect pests
Biological amplification causes high levels in secondary
and tertiary consumers
Causes fragile shells in predatory birds
Decline in Bald Eagle, Osprey, Peregrine Falcon etc…
Reasons for Biodiversity Decline
Introduction of exotic species, e.g.,
Starling, House Sparrow, Oriental
Bittersweet, Multiflora Rose etc…
Reasons for Biodiversity Decline:
Human Population Growth
Reasons for Biodiversity Decline:
Overuse
Examples
Harvest of 50 million songbirds for food –
Southern Europe
Trafficking in wildlife and products derived
from wild species – $10 billion/year
90% decline in rhinos
1.6 tons of tiger bones = 340 tigers
Parrot smuggling: 40 of 330 species face extinction
What steps should we take to reduce
biodiversity decline?
Birds of Prey
Bald Eagle
Considered threatened by 1921
Extinct in North East by 1937
First use of DDT – 1943 to kill lice in Europe
and in US army
Extensive use in nature started ~1955, peaked
in 1962
Biological Amplification
DDT is fat soluble
Cannot be flushed out of body
Accumulates in tissues
Organisms high on the food chain most
effected