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Human in the Biosphere

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Biodiversity: Sum total of the genetically based variety of all ... Passenger Pigeon. Happens because humans make it happen. Tasmanian Wolf. Stellar's Sea Cow ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human in the Biosphere


1
Chapter 6
  • Human in the Biosphere

2
Chapter 6 Concept Map
Biodiversity
Ecosystem Diversity
Species Diversity
Genetic Diversity
Extinctionexamples
Invasive Species/Exotic Speciesexamples
Threatened Speciesexamples
Endangered Speciesexamples
3
Chapter 6 Concept Map continued.
Genetic Diversity from 1st map
Habitat Fragmentation
Edge Effect
Habitat degradation
DDT
Algal Blooms
Acid Precipitation
Biological Magnification
Ozone layer
CFC
Global Warming
Smog
Pollutant
4
Chapter Concept Map
Conservation Biology
Sustainable use
U.S. Endangered Species Act (include President
and year)
Habitat Corridors
Aquaculture
Renewable
Soil eroision
Nonrenewable
Reintroduction Programs
humus
Captivity
5
Vanishing Species
  • Biodiversity Sum total of the genetically based
    variety of all organisms in the biosphere
  • The variety of life in an area
  • Tropical regions contain over 2/3 of all animal
    species
  • One of Earths greatest natural resources

http//www.divetrip.com/galapgos/galapgal.htm
6
Vanishing Species
  • Ecosystem Diversity
  • includes the variety of habitats, communities and
    ecological processes in the living world
  • Species Diversity
  • number of species in the biosphere
  • Genetic Diversity
  • sum total of all the different forms of genetic
    information carried on by all organisms

http//tropicaltreefarms.com/
7
Vanishing Species
  • Island Biodiversity The larger the island, the
    greater the biodiversity.
  • Assuming the islands are in the same biome
    (tropical rain forest, tundra, etc.) this almost
    always holds true.

http//www.nationalgeographic.com/photography/gall
eries/biodiversity/index.html
8
Vanishing Species
  • Why is it important to retain biodiversity in
    nature?
  • Food chains and food webs cannot exist without
    it.
  • For example, if there is only one producer or
    herbivore in an ecosystem, and that species dies,
    there will be no species to take its place and
    the food web will collapse.

http//www.acclaimimages.com/_gallery/_pages/0001-
0309-2612-2932.html
9
Vanishing Species
  • Why is it important for humans to retain
    biodiversity?
  • The more species that exist, the more food we
    have to eat.
  • The more species that exist, the more drugs we
    will have access to- and we may not even know it
    yet!
  • Penicillin, Quinine, a cure for cancer?? AIDS??

http//www.acclaimimages.com/_gallery/_pages/0001-
0209-0121-0016.html
10
Vanishing Species
  • Extinction The complete disappearance of a
    species from the face of the Earth.
  • Happens naturally
  • Passenger Pigeon
  • Happens because humans make it happen.
  • Tasmanian Wolf
  • Stellars Sea Cow

11
Vanishing Species
  • Threatened Species What a species is considered
    when a population declines rapidly.
  • African Elephants- went from 3 million to 700,000
    in 20 years.
  • Endangered Species When numbers of a species get
    so low that extinction is a possibility.
  • Black Rhinoceros- Killed for horns which are used
    in medicines or for knife handles

http//www.acclaimimages.com/_gallery/_pages/0012-
0301-1514-4826.html
http//www.lpzoo.com/tour/factsheets/mammals/blk_r
hino.html
12
Vanishing Species
  • Habitat Loss Destruction of habitats.
  • A forest becomes a parking lot
  • A rain forest becomes a hotel complex
  • A pond is dried up so that an office building can
    be built.
  • ? ? ?The biggest threat to biodiversity! ? ? ?

http//www.acclaimimages.com/_gallery/_pages/0018-
0310-1813-2806.html
13
Vanishing Species
  • Habitat Fragmentation The separation of
    wilderness areas from other wilderness areas.
  • A road comes through a habitat
  • Snows Cut
  • A dam is built
  • Can prohibit migration

http//www.acclaimimages.com/_gallery/_pages/0027-
0312-1217-0544.html
14
Vanishing Species
  • Edge Effect Edges of an ecosystem are negatively
    effected by habitat destruction.
  • Ex. A rainforest is partially cleared and the
    edges of the remaining forest dry out.
  • Ex. A building is placed next to habitat where
    wind is important to pollinate plants. The
    building blocks the wind and plants on the edge
    of the habitat (next to the building) cannot
    reproduce.

http//www.junglephotos.com/conservation/deforesta
tion/lonehut.html
15
5.1 Vanishing Species
  • Habitat Degradation The damage to a habitat by
    pollution.
  • 3 types air, water, and land pollution.
  • Pollutant a harmful material that can enter the
    biosphere through the land, water or air.
  • Acid Precipitation Rain, snow, sleet, or fog
    with low pH values (acidic).
  • Car exhaust and burning of fossil fuels causes
    precip. To become acidic.
  • Smog
  • Think Water Cycle!

http//www.acclaimimages.com/_gallery/_pages/0027-
0312-2707-4139.html
http//www.ggw.org/RochesterEnvironment/acid_rain.
htm
16
Vanishing Species
  • Ozone Layer Layer of O3 (3 oxygen atoms attached
    to each other) that helps protect the Earth and
    everything on it from the suns harmful
    ultraviolet radiation.
  • CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) are the major culprit
    in the destruction of the ozone layer.
  • Results deformities in animals, skin cancer
    increases, etc.
  • Global Warming increase in the average
    temperature of the biosphere.

http//www.atm.ch.cam.ac.uk/tour/part1.html
17
Vanishing Species
  • Water Pollution Largely fertilizer runoff and
    animal waste.
  • Also can be spilled oil or chemicals from
    factories or oil tankers.
  • Includes physical pollution such as trash and
    abandoned nets that kill large fish.
  • Biological Magnification concentrations of a
    harmful substance increase in organisms at higher
    trophic levels

http//www.co.snohomish.wa.us/publicwk/swm/wq/Comm
onWQProbs.htmmanure
18
Vanishing Species
  • Land Pollution Largely garbage produced everyday
    by people such as you and me.
  • Landfills cause habitat destruction
  • Pesticides such as DDT caused many problems
  • Insects that lived had DDT in their system
  • Birds ate the insects
  • Egg shells became thin and ineffective
  • Baby birds died frequently, populations declined
  • DDT was eventually banned
  • Rachel Carson 1962Silent Spring

http//www.csun.edu/vceed002/BFI/sunshine.htmlph
otograph
19
Vanishing Species
  • Invasive/Exotic Species Species not native to a
    particular area, but now live and thrive in their
    new environment.
  • Can be very harmful to their new surroundings.
  • Can grow exponentially because they have no
    predators.
  • Can take over other animals niches, causing
    possible endangerment or extinction.
  • Ex. Rabbits or pigs in Australia

http//piratesvsninjas.typepad.com/photos/lara/kud
zu.html
KUDZU!!!
20
Conservation of Biodiversity
  • Conservation Biology A new field of science that
    studies methods and implements plans to protect
    biodiversity.
  • Based on principles of ecology.
  • Protection of land and the animals that live on
    the land.
  • Need to understand laws, politics, sociology, and
    economics.
  • Describes the wise management of natural
    resources.

21
Conservation of Biodiversity
  • U.S. Endangered Species Act Signed into law in
    1973 by Richard Nixon, this law made it illegal
    to harm any species on the threatened or
    endangered species list.
  • CITES Bans international trade in products
    derived from a list of endangered species.

http//www.nature.com/nsu/031222/031222-2.html
http//www.nmfs.noaa.gov/prot_res/PR3/Turtles/turt
les.html
22
Conservation of Biodiversity
  • Parks and Recreation Habitats are preserved when
    land is turned into a park or wildlife refuge.
  • Only 6 of Earths land surface is protected this
    way.
  • Sustainable Use Letting people use resources on
    this protected land in such a way that no
    habitats are destroyed and no species are
    negatively affected.

http//www.main.nc.us/graham/hiking/joycekil.html
23
Conservation Biology
  • Classifying Resources
  • Renewable
  • can regenerate if they are alive or be
    replenished
  • ex H2O
  • Nonrenewable
  • cannot be replenished by natural processes
  • ex coal, oil and natural gas

http//ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercycle.html
http//www.energyquest.ca.gov/story/chapter08.html
24
Conservation of Biodiversity
  • Habitat Corridors Natural strips of land that
    connect two protected areas.
  • Created by people that are trying to preserve
    migratory routes or natural habitats of species
    in an area.

"It is our ethicalresponsibility to save the
animal and plant species from the terrible
finality of extinction. If we are to succeed, we
must save their habitat."
http//www.earthvoice.org/animal.habitat/habitat.c
orridors.htm
25
Conservation of Biodiversity
  • Reintroduction Programs When a species goes
    extinct in a certain area and ecologists
    reintroduce the species to that area.
  • These animals still may exist in other parts of
    the world, or in captivity.
  • Ex. Swift Fox from population video, California
    Condor, Brown Pelicans.
  • Ex. Ginkgo trees kept in captivity by Chinese
    Monks and reintroduced years later into all parts
    of the world

The Mexican Gray Wolf Recovery Program
http//www.cpluhna.nau.edu/Change/reintroduction.h
tm
26
Important Study Tips!
  • Island Biodiversity
  • Importance of Biodiversity
  • Threatened/Endangered Species
  • Habitat Loss/Fragmentation/Degradation
  • Edge Effect
  • Pollution (Water, Land, Air)
  • U.S. Endangered Species Act
  • 6 of land goes to preservation
  • Habitat Corridors
  • Reintroduction Programs
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