Chapter 13: Biodiversity

1 / 36
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 13: Biodiversity

Description:

spend $104 billion every year on wildlife-related recreation. ... Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada was established in 1976. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:30
Avg rating:3.0/5.0

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 13: Biodiversity


1
  • Chapter 13 Biodiversity
  • In this chapter the following topics will be
    covered
  • Biodiversity and the species concept
  • Benefits of biodiversity
  • Humans threaten biodiversity
  • Biodiversity protection and Endangered Species
    Act
  • Ecosystem management and captive breeding
    programs

2
  • Biodiversity and the Species Concept
  • What Is Biodiversity?
  • Three kinds of biodiversity
  • - Genetic diversity measure of the variety of
    different
  • versions of the same genes within individual
    species.
  • - Species diversity describes the number of
    different kinds of
  • organisms within individual communities or
    ecosystems.
  • - Ecological diversity assesses the richness
    and complexity
  • of a biological community, including the number
    of niches,
  • trophic levels, and ecological processes that
    capture energy,
  • sustain food webs, and recycle materials within
    this system.

3
  • What Are Species?
  • Underlying the commonly used definition of a
    species is the idea that reproductive isolation
    caused by geography, physiology, or behavior
    prevents groups of otherwise similar organisms
    from exchanging genes, and therefore, gives them
    separate identities and evolutionary histories.
  • Problems exist with species definitions
    based on reproductive isolation.
  • - Mating between species occurs in nature and
    may produce
  • fertile offspring.
  • - Difficulty in determining whether two groups
    that live in
  • different places are capable of interbreeding.
  • Species identification, therefore, is often
    based on morphological characteristics.
  • Determining whether similar groups of
    organisms can be considered separate species is
    highly subjective.
  • DNA sequencing technology is revolutionizing
    biological taxonomy.

4
  • How Many Species Are There?
  • The 1.4 million species presently known
    represent only a small fraction of the total
    number that exist.
  • Taxonomists estimate that there may be
    somewhere between 3 and 50 million different
    species alive today.
  • About 70 of all known species are
    invertebrates.
  • Of all of the world's species, only 10 to 15
    percent live in North America and Europe.
  • The centers of greatest biodiversity tend to
    be in the tropics, especially tropical
    rainforests and coral reefs.

5
Table 13.1. -- Approximate numbers of known
living species by taxonomic group Bacteria and
cyanobacteria 5,000 Protozoa
(single-celled animals) 31,000 Algae
(single-celled plants) 27,000 Fungi (molds,
mushrooms) 45,000 Multi-cellular plants
250,000 Sponges
5,000 Jellyfish, corals, anemones 10,000
Flatworms (tapeworms, flukes) 12,000
Roundworms (nematodes, hookworms) 12,000
Earthworms and leeches 12,000 Clams,
snails, slugs, squids, octopuses 70,000
Insects 750,000 Mites,
ticks, spiders, crabs, shrimp, centipedes,
120,000 and other non-insect arthropods
Starfish, sea urchins 6,000 Fish and
sharks 22,000 Amphibians 4,000
Reptiles 6,000 Birds 9,000
Mammals 4,000 TOTAL
1,400,000
















Total
6
  • How Do We Benefit from Biodiversity?
  • Food
  • All of our food comes from other organisms.
  • Plants can contribute to our food supply
    either as they are or as a
  • source of genetic material to improve domestic
    crops.
  • Unfortunately, overgrazing, forest clearing,
    conversion of natural
  • landscapes to agriculture, and other forms of
    disturbance are destroying potentially valuable
    food species and their genes.

7
  • Drugs and Medicines
  • Living organisms provide us with many useful
    drugs and medicines
  • - More than half of all prescriptions contain
    some natural products.
  • - The value of pharmaceutical products derived
    from Third
  • World plants, animals, and microbes is estimated
    to be more
  • than 30 billion/year.
  • Pharmaceutical companies are actively
    prospecting for useful
  • products in many tropical countries.

8
  • Ecological Benefits
  • Many processes all depend on the
    biodiversity of life.
  • - Soil formation
  • - Waste disposal
  • - Air and water purification
  • - Nutrient cycling
  • - Solar energy absorption
  • - Management of biogeochemical and hydrological
    cycles
  • Controversy exists about the role of
    biodiversity in ecosystem
  • stability.
  • Dramatic effects can result from removing
    seemingly
  • insignificant members of biological communities
    (e.g. pest control).

9
  • Aesthetic and Cultural Benefits
  • The diversity of life on this planet brings
    us many aesthetic and
  • cultural benefits (e.g. hunting, fishing,
    camping, hiking, wildlife watching, and other
    outdoor activities).
  • In some cultures, nature carries spiritual
    connotations.
  • Nature appreciation is economically
    important.
  • - The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service estimates
    that Americans
  • spend 104 billion every year on
    wildlife-related recreation. - Ecotourism can
    be a good form of sustainable economic
    development.
  • Many people believe in existence value which
    is simply knowing
  • that a species exists is reason enough to protect
    and preserve it.
  • Many religious groups have called for
    protecting nature because it is
  • God's creation.

10
  • What Threatens Biodiversity?
  • Extinction the elimination of a species is a
    normal process of the
  • natural world.
  • Human impacts on populations and ecosystems
    have accelerated the
  • rate of extinction.
  • Natural Causes of Extinction
  • More than 99 of all species that ever
    existed are now extinct.
  • Most species were gone long before humans
    came on the scene.
  • Periodically, mass extinctions have wiped
    out vast numbers of
  • species and even whole families.
  • - Disappearance of dinosaurs during the
    Cretaceous period
  • - During the Permian period about
    two-thirds of all marine species
  • and nearly half of all plant and animal
    families died out.
  • - Current theories suggest that these
    catastrophes were caused by
  • climate changes.

11
  • Human-Caused Reductions in Biodiversity
  • Between 1600 A.D. and 1850, human activities
    appear to have been responsible for extermination
    of two or three species per decade.
  • Some estimates suggest that we are losing
    species at thousands of times natural rates.
  • Habitat Destruction
  • - Biggest reason for the current increase in
    extinctions is habitat
  • loss.
  • - Habitat fragmentation divides populations
    into isolated groups.
  • - Destruction of forests, wetlands, and other
    biologically rich
  • ecosystems threatens to eliminate thousands or
    even millions of
  • species.

12
(No Transcript)
13
  • Hunting and Fishing
  • - Overharvesting is responsible for depletion
    of many species
  • - Passenger pigeon - hunting and habitat
    destruction.
  • - American Bison - harvested for their hides
    or tongues.
  • - Whales - blubber was highly prized as a
    source of oil.
  • - Fish stocks - at least three-quarters of all
    commercial
  • oceanic species are over-harvested (e.g. shark,
    billfish,
  • shrimp, orange roughy, groupers, groundfishes,
    sea
  • scallops, bluefin tuna, and red snapper).

14
(No Transcript)
15
  • Commercial Products and Live Specimens
  • - In addition to harvesting species for food,
    we also obtain a
  • variety of valuable commercial products from
    nature
  • - Some forms of commercial exploitation are
    highly destructive
  • Despite bans on trade in products
    from endangered
  • species, smuggling of furs, hides, horns, live
    specimens, and folk medicines amount to
    millions of dollars/year.
  • - Developing countries with the richest
    biodiversity are the main
  • sources of wild animals.
  • - Profits to be made in wildlife smuggling are
    enormous.
  • - Elephants, killed for their ivory tusks, are
    an important example
  • of the problems and complexities of wildlife
    trade.
  • In 1980, there were about 1.3
    million African elephants
  • a decade later only half were left.
  • - In contrast, South African has been very
    successful in
  • conserving elephants.
  • Herds have had to be thinned regularly to
    keep them
  • from destroying their habitat.
  • - Plants are also threatened by overharvesting
    (e.g. wild ginseng
  • and cactus).

16
  • Predator and Pest Control
  • - Some animal populations have been greatly
    reduced or
  • exterminated because they are regarded as
    dangerous to
  • humans or livestock or because they compete
    with our use of
  • resources.
  • Some animals are deliberately
    trapped, poisoned, or
  • shot (e.g. coyotes).
  • Some animals are killed unintentionally by
    poisoned
  • bait or misplaced traps.

17
  • Exotic organisms
  • - Organisms introduced into habitats where they
    are not native.
  • - One of the greatest threats to
    native biodiversity.
  • - Many examples of exotic organisms
    exist.
  • Kudzu vine - smothers everything
    in its path, kills trees,
  • pulls down utility lines.
  • Leafy spurge - reduces carrying
    capacity of the western
  • range because cattle can't eat it and it
    crowds out native
  • grasses and forbes.
  • Purple loosestrife - it crowds
    out indigenous vegetation and reduces
    biodiversity in wetlands.
  • Zebra mussels - have reached
    enormous densities
  • covering fish spawning beds, smothering
    native
  • mollusks in all the Great
    Lakes.
  • Round goby - devours the eggs
    and fry of any species that shares their
    territory. One benefit is that this species
    voraciously eat zebra mussels.
  • Asian long-horned beetles - the
    larvae burrow into living tree trunks where
    they cut off sap flow between leaves and roots.
  • - America also sends exotic species
    to other places.

18
  • Diseases
  • - Disease organisms, or pathogens, may be
    considered predators.
  • - The balance between pathogen and
    host does not exist when it
  • is introduced into a new environment
    resulting in an epidemic.
  • American chestnut and the
    introduction of fungal blight by China.
  • Trout and the exotic microorganism called
    Myxobolus cerebralis.
  • Pollution
  • - Toxic pollutants can have disastrous effects
    on local
  • populations.
  • Pesticide-linked declines of
    fish-eating birds and falcons
  • in the 1970s.
  • Declines of marine mammals, alligators, and
    fish suggest complex interrelations between
    pollution and health.
  • Lead poisoning in
    bottom-feeding waterfowl, swans, and cranes
    that ingest spent shotgun pellets that fall into
    lakes and marshes. Scavengers, such as
    condors and bald eagles, eat birds and
    mammals that have ingested lead shot.

19
  • Genetic Assimilation
  • - Rare and endangered species may be threatened
    by genetic assimilation because they
    crossbreed with closely related species that
    are more numerous or more vigorous.
  • - Opportunistic plants or animals introduced
    into a habitat may genetically overwhelm
    local populations.

20
  • Endangered Species Management and Biodiversity
    Protection
  • Parks, wildlife refuges, nature preserves,
    zoos, and restoration
  • programs have been established to protect nature
    and rebuild depleted populations.

21
  • Hunting and Fishing Laws
  • By the 1890s most states had enacted some
    hunting and fishing
  • restrictions.
  • - Idea behind these restrictions was to conserve
    the resource for
  • future human use rather than to preserve
    wildlife for its own sake.
  • The wildlife regulations and refuges
    established since that time have
  • been remarkably successful for many species.
  • - White-tailed deer have increased from half a
    million at the turn
  • of the century to 14 million today.
  • - Wild turkeys and wood ducks were
    nearly all gone fifty years
  • ago, but through restoration efforts have
    been restored to several million each.

22
  • Endangered Species Act
  • Committee on the Status of Endangered
    Wildlife in Canada was established in 1976.
  • U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) was
    established in 1973.
  • Endangered species those considered in
    imminent danger of extinction.
  • Threatened species those that are likely to
    become endangered, at least locally.
  • Vulnerable species those that are naturally
    rare or have been locally depleted by human
  • activities to a level that puts them at risk.
  • Sought to identify all endangered species
    and populations and to save as much biodiversity
    as
  • possible, regardless of its usefulness to humans.
  • Regulates a wide range of activities
    involving endangered species.
  • - Taking (harassing, harming, pursuing etc...)
    either accidentally or on purpose.
  • - Importing into or exporting out of
    the United States.
  • - Possessing, selling, transporting,
    or shipping.
  • - Selling or offering for sale any
    endangered species.
  • Violators of ESA are subject to fines up to
    100,000 and one year imprisonment.
  • Currently, the United States has 1500
    species on its endangered and threatened species
    list
  • and about 500 candidate species waiting to be
    considered.
  • - Although invertebrates make up about
    three-quarters of all known species, they
  • account for only 9 percent of those deemed
    worthy of protection.

23
Table 13.4 -- Endangered and threatened species,
U.S. and foreign, listed by USFWS
Mammals 331 Birds 267
Reptiles 112 Amphibians 22
Fish 113 Invertebrates 135
Plants 520 Source Data from United States
Fish and Wildlife Service, 1999


24
  • Recovery Plans
  • Once a species is listed as endangered, the
    Fish and Wildlife Service is required to
  • prepare a recovery plan detailing how populations
    will be rebuilt to sustainable levels.
  • The United States currently spends about
    150 million per year on endangered
  • species protection and recovery.
  • Some recovery plans have been very
    successful.
  • - American alligators - Florida alone estimates
    that it has at least 1 million.
  • - Bald eagles - in 1999 were declared recovered
    and removed from the list.
  • Opponents of the ESA have tried to require
    that economic costs and benefits be
  • incorporated into endangered species planning.
  • - An important example is that of the northern
    spotted owl whose protection
  • depends on preserving old-growth forest in the
    Pacific Northwest. Economists
  • estimate that saving a population of 1600 to
    2400 owls would cost 33 billion,
  • with most of the losses borne by local companies
    and residents of Washington
  • and Oregon.
  • - An even more costly recovery program may be
    required for Columbia River
  • salmon and steelhead endangered by hydropower
    dams and water storage
  • reservoirs that block their migration to the sea.

25
  • Private Land and Critical Habitat
  • Private land is essential in endangered
    species protection.
  • Eighty percent of the habitat for more than
    half of all listed species is on nonpublic
  • property.
  • Many people are resistant to restrictions on
    how they use their own property to
  • protect what they perceive to be insignificant or
    worthless organisms.
  • - This is particularly true when the land
    has potential for economic
  • development.
  • Habitat conservation plans (HCP) landowners
    are allowed to harvest resources or
  • build on part of their land as long as the
    species benefits overall.
  • - Purpose of HCPs is to try and to avoid
    controversy's like the northern
  • spotted owl.
  • - About 250 HCPs have been approved and 200
    more are in progress.
  • Total of 7 million ha of land
    are covered by these plans.
  • - Scientists and environmentalists often are
    critical of HCPs, claiming these
  • plans often are based more on politics than
    biology.

26
  • Reauthorizing the Endangered Species Act
  • The ESA officially expired in 1992.
  • Since then, Congress has debated many
    alternative proposals from
  • outright elimination to substantial strengthening
    of the act.
  • Proposals for a new ESA generally fall into
    one of two general
  • categories.
  • - Environmentalists encourage an ecosystem and
    habitat protection approach rather than
    focusing on individual
  • species.
  • - ESA opponents want to allow
    exceptions to critical habitat designation.
    Under their proposals, only the least costly,
    most cost effective or least burdensome
    measures would be taken to protect endangered
    organisms.

27
  • Minimum Viable Populations
  • A critical question in all recovery programs
    is the minimum population size
  • required for long-term viability of rare and
    endangered species.
  • A small number of individuals can undergo
    catastrophic declines due to
  • environmental change, genetic problems, or simple
    random events when isolated in a limited
    geographic range.
  • - Described as island biogeography in the work
    of R. H. MacArthur and E.O.
  • Wilson in 1967 who proposed that species
    diversity is a balance between colonization
    and extinction rates.
  • An island far from a population
    source has a lower rate of
  • colonization than a nearer island because it
    is harder to reach.
  • A large island can support more individuals
    of a given species and
  • is less likely to suffer extinction due to
    natural catastrophes, genetic
  • problems, or demographic uncertainty - the
    chance that all members
  • of a single generation will be of the same
    sex.

28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
  • For many species loss of genetic diversity
    causes a variety of harmful effects that
  • limit adaptability, reproduction, and species
    survival.
  • - Founder effect occurs when a few individuals
    establish a new population.
  • - Demographic bottleneck arises when
    only a few individuals survive some
  • catastrophe.
  • - Genetic drift reduction in gene
    frequency in a population due to unequal
  • reproductive success.
  • - Inbreeding mating of closely
    related individuals which can result in random,
  • recessive, and deleterious mutations.
  • Not all species are harmed by the lack of
    genetic diversity (e.g. the northern
  • elephant seal)

31
  • Habitat Protection
  • A growing number of scientists, land
    managers, policymakers, and developers have
  • been making the case that it is time to focus on
    a rational, continent-wide preservation of
    ecosystems that support maximum biological
    diversity rather than a
  • species-by-species battle for the rarest or most
    popular organisms.
  • A leader of this new form of conservation is
    J. Michael Scott, who was the project
  • leader of the California condor recovery program
    in the mid-1980s and had spent ten years working
    on endangered species in Hawaii.
  • - Scott discovered that even Hawaii has
    many vegetation types completely
  • outside of natural preserves.
  • - The gaps between protected areas may
    contain more endangered species than are
    preserved within them.
  • - Gap analysis approach in which
    conservationists and wildlife managers look
    for unprotected landscapes that are rich
    in species.
  • Conservation biologist, R.E. Grumbine
    suggests four remanagement principles for
  • protecting biodiversity in a large-scale,
    long-range approach.
  • - Protect enough habitat for viable
    populations of all native species in a given
  • region.
  • - Manage at regional scales large
    enough to accommodate natural disturbances.
  • - Plan over a period of centuries so
    that species and ecosystems may continue to
    evolve.
  • - Allow for human use and occupancy at
    levels that do not result in significant
  • ecological degradation.

32
  • International Wildlife Treaties
  • The 1975 Convention on International Trade
    in Endangered Species
  • (CITES) was a significant step toward worldwide
    protection of endangered flora and fauna.
  • - Regulated trade in living specimens and
    products derived from
  • listed species.
  • - Species are still smuggled out of countries
    where they are
  • threatened or endangered and documents are
    made to appear
  • they have come from areas where the species
    are still common.
  • - Difficult to regulate in developing countries
    where wildlife is
  • disappearing most rapidly.

33
  • Zoos, Botanical Gardens, and Captive Breeding
    Programs
  • Records of wildlife and exotic plant
    collections date back to the
  • beginning of history.
  • In some places low-life circuses and seedy
    roadside tourist
  • attractions still exhibit sad collections of
    animals in cramped,
  • unhealthy cages.
  • In developed countries, cruel and callous
    conditions have been
  • eliminated by animal welfare laws.
  • Most modern zoos and wildlife parks now keep
    animals in clean and
  • humane conditions.
  • Many animals living will live longer and
    raise more young than they
  • would in the wild.
  • Valuable genetic traits are preserved in
    repositories such as botanical
  • gardens for rare and endangered plant species.
  • - May be reintroduced into native habitats
    after being cultivated
  • in these gardens.

34
  • New Zoos and Game Parks
  • Large enclosures, realistic terrain, and
    multi-species groupings allow
  • more normal social behavior and encourage
    reproduction.
  • Under these new conditions, zoos can be
    important places for
  • scientific research in wildlife biology.
  • Today in the United States some 150
    municipal zoos provide the
  • only experience that people will ever have with
    wild animals.
  • 110 million visitors per year learn about
    nature through visits to
  • zoos.

35
  • Captive Breeding and Species Survival Plans
  • Most mammals in North American zoos are now
    produced by
  • captive breeding programs.
  • These programs have limitations in that not
    all animals reproduce
  • well in captivity.
  • Worldwide, zoos house about 500,000
    individual animals, but only
  • about 900 species total.
  • - Few of these animals are maintained in
    populations large
  • enough to preserve the species indefinitely
    if wild
  • populations were lost.
  • To reduce genetic problems, zoos often
    exchange animals or ship
  • individuals long distances to be bred.

36
  • Saving Rare Species in the Wild
  • The Minnesota Zoo and the Ujung Kulon
    National Park in
  • Indonesia are trying to save the world's few
    remaining
  • Javanese rhinos in their native habitat rather
    than bring them back to the zoo.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)