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Title: There


1
  • Theres enough on this planet for everyones
    needs, but not enough for everyones greed
  • Gandhi

2
Overexploitation
  • Exploitation involves living off the land or sea,
    using plant and animal products for food,
    medicine, shelter, fiber, and other products
  • It is the second most important threat to the
    survival of birds, plants, and mammals
  • It is also the 3rd most important threat to
    freshwater fish extinctions

3
History of Overexploitation
  • Humans have always been extractive by nature
    and primitive societies still largely follow
    this MO
  • While much of this appears sustainable,
    archaeological and paleontological evidence
    suggests premodern people have been driving
    species to extinction for 1,000s of years

4
History of Overexploitation
  • Human colonization onto uninhabited islands or
    continents has typically been followed by mass
    extinction events of large-bodied vertebrates
    (e.g. Europe, parts of Asia, N and S Am,
    Madagascar and many Pacific islands
  • We have awesome potential to kill (e.g. Passenger
    Pigeon, bison, and the Pau-Brasil tree)

5
History of Overexploitation
  • Exploitation of plants and animals is a large
    interest not just in developing countries, but
    everywhere
  • In the US, it is estimated hunting generates 700K
    jobs and has an economic impact of 61B (1)

6
History of Overexploitation
  • Impacts of Exploitation
  • Most activities are directed at a single target
    species

7
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Tropical Terrestrial Ecosystems
  • Timber extraction is a major threat
  • Approximately 5.8M ha of tropical forests logged
    each year (25 world)
  • Single species approaches (e.g. mahogany) are
    difficult to compare to other methods, but it is
    better than clear cutting

8
Exploitation of Target Species
  • A discrepancy between high inflation and slow
    growth rate of tree value creates the situation
    where cutting all trees irrespective of age is
    the best economic plan

9
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Subsistence Hunting has been around for more than
    100K yrs, but consumption has greatly increased
  • Impact varies tremendously across the tropics
  • E.g. Sarawak (25K ton), Amazon (74-181K ton), C
    Af (1-3.7M ton)
  • Much of this is too high (e.g. C Af is 6x higher
    than sustainable rates)

10
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Hunting rates are unsustainably high across the
    Congo (solid) and Amazon (open).

Extraction rate
Sustainable Rate (20)
11
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Subsistence game hunting affects the structure of
    tropical forest mammal assemblages, as well as
    other groups through potential cascading effects

12
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Nontimber forest products (NTFP)
  • E.g. fruits, nuts, oil seeds, latexes, resins,
    gums, medicinal plants, spices, dyes, fibers, and
    may others
  • The ethnobotanical studies have catalogued the
    wide variety of plants used by different groups
    (e.g. India, 6Kof 16K angiosperms used for
    traditional medicines, 79 of trees in 1ha of
    Amazon utilized)

13
Exploitation of Target Species
  • The traditional view of NTFP is usually assumed
    to be sustainable and is viewed as a promising
    alternative to exploitive practices and/or
    landclearing
  • Extractive reserves are one of the of the fastest
    growing categories of protected areas in tropical
    forests
  • The sustainability of these areas is not fully
    understood at this time

14
Exploitation of Target Species
  • However, in tropical rural areas, the combined
    value of consumption and sale of forest goods may
    not make them sustainable over longer time
    periods
  • A boom in homeopathic remedies has resulted in
    gt150 sp of European plants becoming endangered
    and extirpation of many local populations

15
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Another potential problem is the impact of
    harvesting on demographic processes and structure
  • Overharvested populations will succumb to
    demographic collapse

16
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Forestry
  • Only 22 of the worlds original forest remain in
    large, relatively natural ecosystems
  • Most are either boreal (48) or tropical (44),
    with only a fraction of temperate forests
    remaining (3)
  • Many are currently threatened from increased
    pressure from logging

17
Exploitation of Target Species
  • When commercial forestry expands into previously
    remote, roadless areas, it typically results in
    high levels of fragmentation of remaining stands
  • A study of postlogging silviculture on wildlife
    suggests loss of structure (i.e. snags, woody
    debris) is particularly important to many species

18
Exploitation of Target Species
  • In Fennoscandia, 50 of the red-listed species
    are threatened because of forestry
  • In WA, actively managed forests could support
    100 of biodiversity whereas timber management on
    a 50-yr rotation at the landscape level could
    support a maximum of 87
  • Why? Largely structural simplification

19
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Hunting of large mammals, small game, and
    waterfowl are also major target species in
    temperate regions
  • Actively managing to increase game animals has
    proved wildly successful for many species (e.g.
    deer 500K to 30M)
  • In TX populations are gt3M with 0.5M harvested
    annually

20
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Waterfowl provide another resource to manage at
    high levels
  • In 2001, approximately 19.4M birds taken
    involving 1.6M hunters
  • While this may provide a skewed view of
    resources, their habitats frequently aid other
    species of concern (true of waterfowl, probably
    not for deer)
  • Alternative source () for landowners

21
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Aquatic systems, especially marine fisheries,
    have been well monitored
  • Since the 1990s global catches have leveled off
    for the first time in history, despite better
    technology being constantly developed and utilized

22
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Trends have leveled off (and fallen) with
    aquaculture increasing in importance

23
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Wild stocks continue to decline due to poor
    management
  • E.g. A recent survey of 232 stocks showed 83
    over the past 25yrs are on the decline
  • E.g. Canadian cod 99.9 since 1960s
  • By the way, are fish farms a good alternative to
    wild caught? Are they more productive?

24
Exploitation of Target Species
  • There are many species that are targets in the
    oceans
  • There are several traits that many vulnerable
    species in common (easy to capture and
    biologically least productive)
  • E.g. occupy shallow waters, form dense shoals in
    predictable locations, commercially valuable

25
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Chinese bahaba is a fish that meets this criteria
    (frequent byproduct of fishing)
  • Its bladder is popular for medicinal properties
    (7x gold)
  • Relatively late maturity

26
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Some of these same traits apply to other groups
    that make species vulnerable
  • E.g. abalone occur in shallow waters and species
    have been harvested from most valuable to
    leastdensities have changed from 1-5K/acre to
    lt1/acre

27
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Many freshwater taxa are subject to exploitation
    for food and other reasons
  • In 2000, estimated 8.8M tons of inland fish
    caught (22.4M ton aquaculture)
  • Economics in US, estimated 35M spent 38B spent
    fishing/yr
  • Europe, estimate 21.3M anglers

28
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Populations of 4/7 sp of salmon (Onchorhyncus)
    listed as endangered
  • Problem?
  • Problem this may be the most visible fish
    species in the world
  • While wild populations are supplemented with
    hatchery fish, they quickly show divergence
    (genetically, phenotypically) from wild
    populations

Overfishing and dams
29
Exploitation of Target Species
  • Other species are also exploited
  • During 19th century, Ms of freshwater mussels
    were collected
  • However, despite brief respite, currently Ms of
    kg are exported to Asia
  • Currently, pollution, dams, dredging, siltation
    and invasives
  • In US, currently 72 (of 297) considered
    endangered with 27 extinct

30
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • There are direct effects of exploitation, but
    there are also indirect effects
  • In addition, there may be damage to the
    environment, causing changes in biological
    relationships or in landscapes or ecosystem
    functions

31
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • Even logging directed at a single species can
    puncture a hole in the forest
  • Even highly selective logging operations with
    modest levels of incidental damage to nontarget
    trees can generate enough structural disturbance
    by increasing desiccation and dry fuel loads
  • Furthermore, mechanized logging itself triggers
    surface fires

32
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • Can you envision a scenario when loss of
    large-bodied frugivores may impact forest
    dynamics?
  • Seedling recruitment is not clear under different
    levels of hunting pressure however, in some
    heavily hunted forest dispersal can decrease by
    60

90 in some forests
33
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • In temperate regions, loss of large mammals can
    have deleterious effects
  • Beavers are ecosystem engineers can dramatically
    alter the landscape
  • Recently, they are making a comeback
  • Loss of Grizzly bears had cascading
    effectsincreasing elk pop(s) and moose,
    decreasing riparian habitat, reducing songbird
    populations

34
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • When predators are excluded, some herbivore
    populations can get extremely abundant, altering
    plant communities (loss of 95 of a rare orchid
    in WV due to excessive deer browsing)

35
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • Marine fisheries are estimated to have a global
    by-catch of roughly 27M tons/yr
  • How? Trawl fisheries, drift nets and gill nets
  • Shrimp trawlers (with relatively small mesh size)
    are estimate to discard 5kg of by-catch for 1kg
    of shrimp

36
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • Is this just impacting fish?
  • 19/21 Albatrosses (attempting to eat baited fish)
  • Can they really be that impactful?
  • Each boat may set 1,000s of hooks/day with a
    total of gt250M hooks/yr
  • It is estimated that 20K sea turtles are caught
    in the Mediterranean/yr on hooks
  • Up to 120K sea snakes taken in Aust/yr

37
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • We were talking about the impact of exploitation
    on non-target species (e.g. by-catch, albatrosses)

38
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • Unfortunately there are many freshwater examples
    of problems
  • No individuals caught since 2001
  • May reach 300 kg
  • Only spawn in specific rapids

39
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • Indirect freshwater effects
  • Salmon bring a huge nutrient load into freshwater
    systems as they return to spawn and die (8x inc
    in macroinverts)
  • Early evidence for a correlation between size of
    salmon runs from 1924 to 1994 and tree-ring
    growth rates

40
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Density dependent factors impacting the natural
    rate of increase

41
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Why should we think populations to be able to
    withstand the elevated mortality that occurs with
    most forms of exploitation?
  • There may be compensatory birth and growth rates
    to somewhat offset elevated death rates

42
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • If a large number of individuals are going to die
    from one time to the next, is thinning the
    equivalent?
  • An easy way to approach the question of elevated
    mortality is to start with the logistic model,
    which gives the number of individuals at time t
    as

Nt Nmax / 1 ((Nmax/N0 ) 1)e-rt
43
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Where Nmax is the carrying capacity (which is not
    stable)
  • Sometimes biomass is substituted for population
    size (B for N). Why?

Nt Nmax / 1 ((Nmax/N0 ) 1)e-rt
44
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Why should we think populations to be able to
    withstand the elevated mortality that occurs with
    most forms of exploitation?
  • There may be compensatory birth and growth rates
    to somewhat offset elevated death rates

45
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Why should we think populations to be able to
    withstand the elevated mortality that occurs with
    most forms of exploitation?
  • There may be compensatory birth and growth rates
    to somewhat offset elevated death rates

46
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Classic logistic population growth to a maximum
    pop(n) size

47
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • The growth of this classic population is
  • What is the relationship N Nmax ?
  • Consider if the pop(n) is being exploited at a
    steady rate, then its rate of change per unit
    time (dN/dt) will be the difference between its
    surplus production and the yield (Y)

g(N) rN (1 N/Nmax)
dN/dt rN (1 N/Nmax) - Y
48
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Sustainable yield occurs at 50 of maximum pop(n)
    sizewhy?

49
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Stabilities of exploitation
  • In theory, we have discovered where the MSY
    occurs
  • Problem?

50
Impacts of Exploitation on Non-Target Species
  • In terms of simple population dynamics, it is the
    surplus that can be removed in any given year
  • Depending upon population size, that will vary
    greatly

51
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • MSY occurs at intermediate pop(n) size

52
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Stability of Exploitation
  • There is a theoretical number of individuals
    takenany problems?
  • Lots
  • People rarely do as they are told
  • Conditions do not always favor optimal growth

53
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Constant Quotas
  • Constant quotas are determined when the number of
    individuals removed is independent of the
    population size (another way to thinksubtract Y
    from the surplus yield, rather than making Y
    proportion to N)
  • This has been used to set many fishery quotas
    (e.g. Peruvian anchovies)
  • Is this a good approach?

54
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Consider 3 levels of constant quota harvest (no
    relationship to N)

High Quota will always crash MSY Quota even
when above NMSY, pop(n) will decline Finally,
even Low Quota will decline if initial pop(n) is
low
55
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Proportional exploitation (constant effort)
  • This approach ties takes to pop(n) size
  • As long as the exploitation rate is below the
    intrinsic rate of natural increase, r, then all
    equilibria are stable
  • Has been shown to be important in tracking actual
    take rates and the importance of monitoring
    pop(n) sizes

56
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Consider the size of the yield (Y), the
    exploitation rate (E) and the population size.

g(N) rN (1 N/Nmax)
Y EN (proportional exploitation) Substituting
rN (1 N/Nmax) EN And as long as Eltr then N
Nmax (1- E/r)
57
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • As long as E lt r, all equilibria are stable

58
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • How do the two approaches compare?
  • Examine data from Marten harvests
  • Both approaches do relatively well at low rates

59
Biological Theory to Sustainable Exploitation
  • Threshold Exploitation involves the use of pop(n)
    size thresholds to determine not only the rate of
    exploitation but also whether exploitation should
    take place at all
  • Since all pop(s) fluctuate, it is this excess
    that will be harvested
  • If a surplus does not exist, no take will be made
    (i.e. very safe approach)

60
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • There are many approaches to determining what
    approach should be established for sustainable
    yields
  • Various strengths and weaknesses (think of a
    demographic model with all the parameters)

61
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Surplus Production models are also called surplus
    yield models or production models
  • Frequently used in fisheries
  • If you know how yields have responded to
    different levels of exploitation effort over
    time, then you could estimate the dome-shaped
    yield curve (thus not requiring new data)

62
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
63
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • There are many pitfalls with this approach
    including it treats all years as replicates
  • Consider Cod
  • The largest fisheries collapse ever (Peruvian
    anchovy) in the early 1970s when it adopted a
    surplus production model that suggested levels
    were safe

64
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Yield-per-recruit models were developed
    originally as part of the dynamic pool concept
    in the landmark fisheries book written by
    Beverton and Hold (1957)
  • The dynamic pool attempts to keep track of
    separate processes that add to a population (e.g.
    recruitment and growth) or subtract from it (e.g.
    natural and catch mortality)

65
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Imagine a species that becomes more valuable as
    it ages
  • If exploitation is weak, most of the fish or
    trees will be large when taken
  • If you wait too long, natural death occurs
  • This model searches for the level of mortality
    that maximizes the yield under this tradeoff
    between numbers and value

66
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Once the level of mortality has been found that
    maximizes the yield per recruit, we can calculate
    the total yield that will be obtained from a
    given level of mortality, if we know how many
    recruits are coming each year
  • This approach is used in many countries
  • Does require info about how the value (often
    size) of individuals increases with age, as well
    as an estimate of natural mortality rates

67
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • For some species ( or conservation) there is
    enough data for full-blown population models
  • These models combine data on all demographic
    parameters (survival, age at maturity,
    age-specific mortality)

68
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Assessment of population growth rates is a common
    practice to deduce whether populations are
    declining as a result of direct exploitation or
    exploitation of their habitats
  • Another use is to diagnose the reasons for
    population declines and to suggest the likelihood
    of success of various management strategies (e.g.
    loggerhead turtles, eggs vs. older adults)

69
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Projected annual strandings for Kemps ridley
    seas turtles under levels of compliance by
    shrimpers (current to full compliance)

70
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Adjustments based on recent results
  • If we can monitor either the population itself or
    the numbers of individuals taken, we can adjust
    the quotas each yr based upon new information
  • This is currently the approach for waterfowl and
    mammal hunting in the US (read Box 8.1 on martens)

71
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Demographic rule of thumb
  • Parameter-dependent models are useless for the
    vast majority of the worlds exploited
    specieswhy?
  • One of the best-known rules of thumb models to
    determine if exploitation of tropical mammals can
    be sustainable
  • It assumes maximum potential production (Pmax)
    occurs at about 60 of K

Pmax (0.6D x ?max) 0.6D
72
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • Of course there are many potential problems with
    this simplistic model
  • There are problems with cull rates compared to
    mortality rateswhy?
  • Are density estimates accurate? Why?
  • Estimating ?max is not easy and variable

73
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
  • There are spatial and temporal problems of
    establishing accurate production numbers

74
Comparison of Approaches to Sustainable Yields
75
Overexploitation
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