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Title: Lecture No. 3 BIOL 549 Biodiversity


1
Lecture No. 3BIOL 549 Biodiversity
Conservation
  • Measuring Biodiversity
  • Ecosystem Classification Systems
  • Biodiversity Virtual Fieldtrips and Mapping

2
Consider biodiversity at many scales and levels
3
Biodiversity - hierarchical levels of analysis
Regions Ecosystems Communities Species Populations
Individuals Genes Molecules
4
Species
  • Most useful level is the species, because most
    scientists agree on what constitutes a species
  • A commonly accepted definition is "a population
    whose members are able to interbreed freely under
    natural conditions".

5
Cataloging and Discovering Species and Ecosystems
  • Team efforts to use the World Wide Web to
    coordinate the efforts of hundreds of biologists
    to classify and describe species.
  • a) Tree of Life
  • b) All-species Foundation
  • c) All-species Inventory
  •  
  • For many years biologists divided Life forms
    into
  • prokaryotes, in which the DNA is not enclosed in
    a nucleus, e.g. bacteria and viruses  
  • eukaryotes, in which the DNA is enclosed in a
    nucleus.  This group includes the algae, fungi,
    protozoans, animals, and plants. 

6
New Group of Organisms
  • Archaea, consisting of about 500 species
    discovered in 1977.
  • First discovered in the most extreme environments
    - the hottest, coldest, and highest pressure,
    e.g. high salt and alkaline environments--called
    "extremophiles".
  • Now scientists are finding that they are very
    abundant in the open ocean as well, especially
    around Antarctica.  In fact, they are so abundant
    that they are estimated to make up about 30 of
    the biomass on Earth.
  • New Species.  About 10,000 new species are found
    every year, and most of these are insects and
    other inconspicuous animals.

7
New Ecosystems
  • Hydro-thermal marine vents. The vents, which are
    like submarine hot springs, have been found to
    support over 300 new species of organisms.
  • Anchialine caves . These habitats are flooded
    caves, under land but usually near the coast,
    that have no direct surface connection with the
    sea.
  • Lava tubes.

8
NEMO (New Millennium Observatory
http//www.pmel.noaa.gov/vents/nemo/index.html
9
Anchialine Caves
Remipedia  
  • See - World Association of Copepodologists
    http//www.copepoda.uconn.edu/anchialine.htm
  • Anchialine habitats are flooded coastal caves and
    groundwater habitats that lack any direct surface
    connection with the open sea.  They are inhabited
    by remarkably primitive animals, long term
    survivors of ancient lineages, which are
    threatened by changes in their fragile habitat.
  • Galapagos Islands and Palau in the Pacific, the
    Canaries and the Bahamas in the Atlantic, and the
    Balearics in the Mediterranean.
  • In recent years over 200 new species, at least 10
    new families and even a new class of crustaceans
    - the Remipedia - have been described from
    anchialine caves, particularly on islands.
  • See A Condensed History of Biospeleology in
    Yucatanhttp//www.caves.org/project/qrss/bspeleo
    h.htm

10
Lava Tube - Rwanda
11
Number of Species on Earth
  • Until a few years ago, number of species on earth
    was estimated at between 1.4 and 6 million.
  • A dramatic upward revision of these estimates to
    30 million came about as a result of work by
    Erwin on tropical beetles.
  • A more reliable estimate comes from work on
    tropical bugs (hemipterans) on the island of
    Sulawesi, Indonesia by Hodkinson and Casson
    (1991). about 5 million

12
Hodkinson and Casson
  • They sampled bugs over a one-year period using
    several sampling methods at several sites
    including a variety of host plants.
  • They found a total of 1690 species of which only
    37.5 were previously described. Total of
    described species of hemipterans is 78,656.
    Therefore, a simple estimate for the real total
    is 78,656 x 100/37.5 209,749
  • Hemipterans represent about 10 of all described
    insect species therefore, the estimate for the
    total number of insect species is about 2.1
    million, giving an estimate for the total species
    number of about 5 million - consistent with
    earlier estimates.

13
Geographical Patterns of Species Richness
  • For example, on Australia's Great Barrier Reef,
    the number of genera of coral is less than 10 at
    the southern end but more than 50 at the northern
    end.
  • Number of sea squirt species is 103 in the arctic
    but 629 in the tropics. Even deep sea species
    diversity is higher in the tropics than at the
    poles.

14
Places with High Abundance but Lower Species
Numbers
  • Where wildlife is very abundant although the
    number of species may not break any records.
  • An example is the Southern Ocean surrounding the
    Antarctic continent, which supports one of the
    most productive ecosystems on Earth.
  • East African grasslands, e.g. Serengeti

15
Wildebeast Migration
http//www.climbingaround.net/Africa/Wildebeasts.h
tm
16
Species Richness
GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY VALUE a map showing the
distribution of some of the most highly valued
terrestrial biodiversity world-wide (mammals,
reptiles, amphibians and seed plants), using
family-level data for equal-area grid cells (ref
10), with red for high biodiversity and blue for
low biodiversity.
Mapping biodiversity value worldwide combining
higher-taxon richness from different groups.
Williams, P. H., Gaston, K. J. Humphries, C.
J. (1997) Proceedings of the Royal Society,
Biological Sciences, 264 141-148..
17
Why?
  • The reason for the species richness of the
    tropics is not known, but the following ideas
    have been proposed
  • Organisms in the tropics have had a longer time
    in which to evolve new species. In temperate
    zones species have been periodically wiped out by
    glaciation during the ice ages.
  • Milder climate and greater supply of solar energy
    allows more biomass to be produced. This
    translates into more organisms per unit area, so
    more species can exist in a given area.

18
Classification Systems
  • ESS (Earth System Science)
  • Biogeographical
  • Ecological
  • Natural Areas
  • Hotspots
  • Life Zones
  • Etc.

19
Hierarchical Structure of LifeFrom Cells to
Biosphere
  • Universe
  • Galaxies
  • Stars
  • Planets
  • Earth
  • Biosphere
  • Ecosystems
  • Communities
  • Populations
  • Organisms
  • Organ Systems
  • Organs
  • Tissues
  • Cells
  • Molecules
  • Atoms
  • Subatomic particles

Biological Entities
20
Earth System Science
21
ESS (Earth System Science) In NASAs Earth
Science Enterprise
22
Bretherton The Earth System
23
Full Diagram - Earth Systems
24
Stuart Gage, Michigan State University
25
Sun
Earths position
From Stuart Gage, Michigan State University
Geographical latitude
Solar Radiation
CHANGE
Climate
Weather
Greenhouse gases
Temperature and moisture dynamics
Earths rotation (Seasonality)
Chemical comp.
Global wind circulation
Cloud cover
Energy
Energy
Atmosphere
Condensation
Sea-Ice dynamics
Water Cycle
Evaporation
Precipitation
Cryosphere
Respiration Heat
Nitrogen
Oxygen
Carbon
Biogeochemical Cycles
Population
Human-made disturbances
Terrestrial Ecosystems
Aquatic Ecosystems
Sulfur
Phosphorus
Ocean circulation
Ocean depth zones
Nutrients
Population growth
Heat
Photosynthesis
plants
Culture
Algal bed
Autotrophs
algae
Tropical F
Coral reef
Estuaries
Decomposers
Natural resources
prokaryotes
Shelf
bacteria
CHANGE
Fresh water distribution
Open Ocean
Energy use
Hydrosphere
CHANGE
Sea level
Land use
Herbivores
Omnivores
Ocean heat capacity
Sociosphere
Temperate F
protozoa
Marine
Precipitation
fungi
Technology
Carnivores
Boreal F
virus
Natural disturbances
animals (inc.humans)
Savanna
Thermal vents
Seasonal precipitation
Environmental values
Grassland
Tundra
Water runoff
Freshwater
Desert
Chaparral
Temperature
Agriculture Fisheries Forestry Urban
Surface-Ground water dynamics
Ecosystem management
Organization
Succession Evolution Extinction
Soil development
Lithosphere
Energy
Plate tectonic cycle
Rock cycle
Earths internal heat
Earthquakes Volcanism
Continental Geomorphology
Sea-floor Geomorphology
CHANGE
M Colunga-Garcia, S Gage, P Webber, D Long, and
C Harris.1999. The Biosphere Diagram II. MSU ESSE
Program
26
Biogeography
  • The science of biogeography is the study of the
    geographic distribution of organisms.
  • Classification systems are defined and produced
    for various scales of use and depending on
    disciplinary interests and goals
  • Realms, Provinces, Ecoregions, Biomes,
    Ecosystems, Floristic Kingdoms, Life Zones,
    Natural Areas note some variety in use of
    terms by different disciplines, e.g. ecologists,
    biogeographers, landscape ecologists, etc. For
    example
  • Zoogeographic REALMS (provinces by some systems)
    are regions of distinctive fauna. They are based
    on the taxonomic or phylogenetic relationships of
    animals and not the adaptations of animals to
    specific environments. The gene pool (i.e, the
    taxa represented) is different in each province.
  • Nearctic
  • Palearctic
  • Ethiopian
  • Australian
  • Oriental
  • Neotropical
  • Biogeographic realms are subdivided into 227
    provinces
  • World Wildlife fund and National Geographic
    Society recently mapped 867 terrestrial
    ecoregions
  • Illustration Mexican Biodiversity database by
    Vivanatura http//www.vivanatura.org/

27
Key Systems - Definitions
  • Cells gt organs gt organisms
  • Populations group of individual organisms of
    the same kind that intebreeds
  • Species made up of populations capable of
    interbreeding and occasionally exchanging genes
  • Genus several species sharing genetic
    characteristics
  • Ecological communities sets of interacting
    species
  • Ecosystem ecological community of plants,
    animals, fungi and microorganisms and its local,
    non-biological environment (air, water, soils,
    etc.)
  • Biomes global classes of ecosystems. A biome is
    composed not only of the climax vegetation, but
    also of associated successional communities,
    persistent subclimax communities, fauna, and
    soils.
  • Biosphere The place on Earths surface where
    life dwells Vladimir Ivanovitch Vernadsky
    (1863-1945)- CEVL (Michigan State University)


28
Biosphere
29
Global Biomes
Distribution of global biomes and their
correlation with latitude, altitude and
precipitation. 
30
Grasslands - Eurasia and Africa
31
Life Zones
  • Affects of climatic variables on distribution of
    plant life, Alexander von Humbolt (1807)
    altitudinal zonation
  • Traditional Latin American Zones (Humbolt)
  • Tierra caliente
  • Tierra Templada
  • Tierra fria
  • Tierra helada
  • Paramo, etc
  • C. Hart Merriam (1889) mean annual temperature
    and distribution of flora and fauna in the
    western US Life Zones
  • Merriam delineated six different life zones and
    correlated these with latitudinal vegetation
    zones ranging from Sonora, Mexico, to the Arctic
    coast of Canada.
  • Koeppens climates (1930) more later
  • Holdridges Life Zones (1947) The life zones
    are defined first according to a climatic
    variable--degrees mean annual biotemperature (and
    not according to degrees latitude or meters of
    elevation).

32
East African Vertical Zones
33
Altitudinal Vegetation ZonesVirunga Mountains
34
Climographs Koppen Climates
http//www.fs.fed.us/colorimagemap/images/app2.htm
l
35
Biogeography Online
  • Living in the Biosphere Production, Pattern,
    Population, and Diversity, by Dwight Brown (Univ.
    of Minnesota)
  • http//www.colorado.edu/geography/virtdept/module/
    biosphere/toc.html
  • Overview of Life Zones, Biomes, Zoogeographic
    Provinces (Radford University Biogeography
    course)
  • http//www.runet.edu/swoodwar/CLASSES/GEOG235/bio
    geog.htm
  • Stuart Gage, CEVL(Computation Ecology
    Visualization Laboratory) Michigan State
    Universityhttp//www.cevl.msu.edu/

DEVELOPING ACTIVE LEARNING MODULES ON THE HUMAN
DIMENSIONS OF GLOBAL CHANGE Association of
American Geographers And NSF (National Science
Foundation)
36
Importance of Distribution Patterns
  • Local Endemics
  • e.g. remote islands, isolated mountains,
  • very susceptible to extinction due to
    over-exploitation and habitat loss.
  • Sparsely Distributed Species
  • Occur over very large geographical regions but
    are not very abundant anywhere.
  • e.g. tigers, Grizzly Bear
  • Migratory Species
  • require habitats along and at each end of their
    migration routes, e.g. The Case Of The Missing
    Songbirds (bird-friendly coffee) Smithsonian
  • Sea turtles in Meso-america
  • Convention on Migratory Species (CMS)
  • September 2002 meeting some of the notable new
    listings on Appendix I were the Bactrian Camel
    (down to less than 1000 individuals), the Great
    White Shark and three species of whale.
  • Conservation "Hot spots High endemism coupled
    with imminent threats from habitat loss Coastal
    California
  • Two important facts about California
  • California is the most biologically diverse
    state in the union, with 40,000 species and more
    federally listed species than any other mainland
    state.
  • California's population is expected to grow from
    32 million to 49 million by the year 2025.

37
Biodiversity Hotspots
http//www.biodiversityhotspots.org/xp/Hotspots/
Threatened Endemic SpeciesLists of threatened
terrestrial vertebrate species for each hotspot
are available as a PDF below. These lists include
threatened mammals, birds, reptiles, and
amphibians that are endemic to the hotspot. They
were compiled by the Center for Applied
Biodiversity Science at Conservation
International based on the 1996 IUCN Red List of
Threatened Animals (Baillie Groombridge 1996).
The threatened status of each terrestrial
vertebrate species currentlyin the list has been
updated to the 2000 Red List (Hilton-Taylor
2000). We are currently in the process of
determining which additional hotspot endemic
terrestrial vertebrate species should be included
because they were included as threatened on the
2000 Red List but not listed in 1996. Atlantic
Forest (thrspp04.pdf - 72KB)Brazilian Cerrado
(thrspp06.pdf - 68KB)California Floristic
Province (thrspp08.pdf - 65KB)Cape Floristic
Region (thrspp11.pdf - 66KB)Caribbean
(thrspp03.pdf - 85KB)Caucasus (thrspp15.pdf -
64KB)Central Chile (thrspp07.pdf -
63KB)Choco-Darien-Western Ecuador (thrspp05.pdf
- 69KB)Eastern Arc Mountains Coastal Forests
(thrspp10.pdf - 69KB)Guinean Forests of West
Africa (thrspp13.pdf - 71KB)Indo-Burma
(thrspp19.pdf - 73KB)Mediterranean Basin
(thrspp14.pdf - 71KB)Madagascar Indian Ocean
Islands (thrspp09.pdf - 76KB)Mesoamerica
(thrspp02.pdf - 71KB)Mountains of Southwest
China (thrspp20.pdf - 69KB)New Caledonia
(thrspp22.pdf - 65KB)New Zealand (thrspp23.pdf -
71KB)Philippines (thrspp18.pdf - 85KB)Polynesia
Micronesia (thrspp24.pdf - 73KB)Southwest
Australia (thrspp25.pdf - 68KB)Succulent Karoo
(thrspp12.pdf - 65KB)Sundaland (thrspp16.pdf -
71KB)Tropical Andes (thrspp01.pdf -
75KB)Wallacea (thrspp17.pdf - 72KB)Western
Ghats Sri Lanka (thrspp21.pdf - 69KB)
38
In-class Activities
  • Each student explore for ¼-½ hour ONE of the
    following ecosystem classification systems and
    report back to class on following
  • Criteria for definition of threats/endangerment
    etc
  • At what scale is the system most applied and used
  • What is the primary goal of the classification
    system
  • What key ecosystems are defined or listed as
    highest priority.
  • US Forest Service ECOMAP Team Baileys
    Ecoregions
  • Sierra Club Critical Ecoregions Program
  • WCMC/UNEP - World Atlas of Biodiversity
  • Conservation International Biodiversity
    Hotspots
  • LUHNA (Land Use History of North America) Program
    USGS
  • World Resources Institute (WRI) Pilot Analysis
    of Global Ecosystems (PAGE) and Millennium
    Ecosystem Assessment, WRI and others
  • National Geographic Society and WWF Wild World
    (terrestrial ecosystems)
  • Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC)
    Ecological Regions of North America

39
Take-Home Activity
  • Virtual Fieldtrips and Resources to report on and
    evaluate
  • Indian Peaks, Colorado
  • Pt. Reyes, California
  • Big Bend National Park, Texas
  • Virunga Mountains, Rwanda
  • Muskegon River Watershed CEVL (Michigan)
  • Great Salt Lake Ecosystem, Utah
  • Deep Lock Quarry, Ohio
  • Land and Life on the North American Prairie, USA
  • Each of you find another online fieldtrip see
    Ecotourism and Fieldtrips or use GOOGLE etc.
  • Robert Fords BIOSPHERE resources
  • http//www.usra.edu/esse/ford/ESS205/g300www/g300w
    wwbios.html
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