Title: Wild Species and Biodiversity
1Wild Species and Biodiversity
- Chapter 10
- A.P. Environmental Science
2Introduction
- Puffins are little seabirds that live in cold
coastal waters on both sides of the North
American continent. - Before the 1900s, they were hunted for their
eggs, meat, and feathers - Populations of puffins decreased in Maine.
- Project Puffin- plan to take some puffins from
Newfoundland to Maine. - Trained birds to adapt to the new territory
- Called social attraction
- This included painted decoys, tapes of puffin
noises and bogus eggs. - The island now has a colony of 52 pairs
310.1 The Value of Wild Species
- Ecosystem capital- sum of all goods provided by
ecosystems. - The integrity of the ecosystem must be maintained
- We must maintain resilience and biodiversity
- In order for ecosystem capital to remain
valuable, natural systems must be sustained - Done by not abusing resources
- Different values must be reconciled.
4Biological Wealth
- About 1.75 million species of plants, animals,
and microbes have been classified. - There are about 13 million species that have not
yet been discovered - All species together make up a biota and are
responsible for the structure and maintenance of
all ecosystems - Represent biological wealth-ecosystem capital
- Humans have always exploited wild species for
food and materials - Forests, savannas and plains became fields and
pastures - At least 500 plant and animal species have become
extinct in the U.S. alone
5Two Kinds of Value
- Instrumental value a species has instrumental
value if its existence or use benefits some other
entity - Anthropocentric- beneficial to human needs
- Intrinsic value- species have intrinsic value
when it has value for its own sake.
6continued
- The value of natural species can be categorized
as - Value as sources for agriculture, forestry,
aquaculture, and animal husbandry - Value as sources for medicines
- Recreational value
- Intrinsic value
7Sources for agriculture, forestry, and animal
husbandry
- In nature, both plants and animals are
continuously subjected to the rigors of natural
selection. - Only the fittest survive
- Wild populations have resistance to parasites and
tolerance to adverse conditions. - They exhibit vigor.
- Populations grown under the conditions of
agriculture lose traits. - They are selected for production, not resilience.
If a plant is not drought tolerant, it is
irrigated. - This population is known as a cultivar
- Minimum genetic variation
- Produce high yields
- Cannot adapt to other conditions
8continued
- To maintain vigor in cultivars and to adapt them
to various climatic conditions, plant breeders
comb wild populations of related species for the
desired traits. - Example corn crop in the 1970s was saved from
blight by genes from a wild strain of maize.
9continued
- If natural biota is lost, improving and
developing new food plants will greatly reduce. - Wheat, maize, and rice fulfill about 50 of
global food demands. - Growth can be affected by environment
- Wild genes can be used to help enhance
development in arid regions - Some pests come from natural biota and should not
be depleted. - Control them using natural enemies
- Natural biota are referred to as a genetic bank
- Deposit species and withdraw them
10Sources for Medicine
- Plant species are used for medicine
- People of Madagascar use the rosy periwinkle
- In the 1960s, scientists extracted two chemicals
from this flower vincristine and vinblastine - Used to treat leukemia and Hodgkins disease
11continued
- More drugs
- Capoten- taken from a Brazilian pit viper (snake)
- Controls high blood pressure
- Taxol- taken from the bark of the English yew
tree - Treats ovarian, breast, and small cell cancers
12Ethnobotany
- The study of relationships between plants and
people - 3,000 plants have been identified as having
anticancer properties - Drug companies finance field studies to find
more. There may be promising drugs being tested
now but announcement will wait until approval by
FDA.
13Recreation, Aesthetic, and Scientific Value
- Recreational and aesthetic values constitute a
very important source of support for maintaining
wild species. - Ecotourism- tourists visit a place in order to
observe wild species or unique ecological sites
14Value for their own sake
- Some people believe that the most important
strategy for preserving all wild species is to
emphasize the intrinsic value of species - There is much debate about the right for humans
to terminate a species - Some say one living thing is no better than
another living thing. - All religions have different viewpoints
- Jewish and Christian- all wild things deserve
moral consideration and care - Islamic- environment is the creation of Allah and
must be protected - Native American religions- wildlife and humans
should interact like members of a large family
1510.2 Saving Wild Species
- Game animals are animals that are hunted
- Some are hunted to extinction
- Some have been provided with complete protection
by the government - Wild turkey
- After WWII state and federal programs stressed
the need to protect turkey habitats - The birds have made a great comeback, now in 49
states. - Special protection areas are funded by hunting
fees
16Positive aspects of hunting
- Many hunters belong to organizations dedicated to
the game they are hunting - Raise funds that are used for the restoration and
maintenance of natural ecosystems - Some animals cause major damage
- Deer and kangaroos
- Kangaroos are culled each year for use as pet
food and for their leather.
17- PETA actively campaign to end hunting and
trapping. - Some traps are especially cruel
- Some animals have adapted to urban and suburban
environments. - Squirrels
- Backyard birds
- Rabbits
- Some predators
18Problems
- The following are serious problems that have
emerged from an increase in certain animal
populations - The number of animals killed on roadways now far
exceeds the number killed by hunters - Many nuisance animals are thriving in urbanized
areas - Some animals reach high population densities
because they lack predators. - People in suburban areas have been attacked by
cougars, bears, alligators, and other wild life. - Coyote populations are increasing
- Parks and lawns have become home to flocks of
geese
19Wildlife services?
- In 1998, the agency of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture changed its name from Animal Damage
Control to Wildlife Services - Responds to requests from livestock owners,
farmers, homeowners, and others concerned with
economic damage, human health, and safety to
remove nuisance animals
20Acts protecting endangered species
- Florida and Texas were the first states to pass
laws protecting plumed birds. - Lacey Act
- Forbids interstate commerce in illegally killed
wildlife - U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services can bring federal
charges against anyone who violates this law
21Endangered Species Act
- Passed in 1973
- Protects endangered and threatened species
- Endangered- brink of extinction
- Threatened- populations fall drastically, but not
near extinction
22continued
- There are three crucial elements in the process
of designating a species as endangered or
threatened - Listing- species is listed by the appropriate
agency or by petition - Critical Habitat- agency must designate the
habitat areas where the species is found - Recovery Plans- plan to help the species survive
and thrive
23Impact on species
- Some people believe that the act does not go far
enough - Others oppose
- 13 species have been removed from the list
because they recovered (American Peregrine
Falcon) - 7 have become extinct
24Fly Away Home
- People have made efforts to help the whooping
cranes migrate from Wisconsin to Florida - This includes, using eggs from captive breeding
flocks and teaching birds its migratory path
following an ultralight.
25The Spotted Owl
- This species lives in old growth forests in the
Pacific Northwest - Its population was down to between 4 and 6 K
- The original plan called for 7.4 million acres to
be set aside and logging prohibited in stands of
trees older than 80 years.
26Controversy
- The Klamath River provides irrigated water for
250,000 acres of farmland. - In 2001, because of an extended drought, the
government allocated almost all the water to
prevent the extinction of salmon. - Upset many farmers
- Problem is still not resolved
2710.3 Biodiversity and its decline
- No one knows how much biodiversity there is
- 1.75 million species that have been described
- Many more exist
- Groups rich in species are the flowering plants
and insects - Estimates in the number of species on Earth today
are based on recent work in the tropical rain
forests - Costa Rica makes up 5 of biota
28The Decline in Biodiversity
- At least 500 species native to the U.S. are known
to have become extinct - The species populations are a more important
element of biodiversity than just the species
existence. - It is the populations that contribute to
biological wealth - Populations of birds in North America are
dramatically declining
29Global Outlook
- At least 726 animal species and 90 plant species
have become extinct since1500. - Most extinctions occur on oceanic islands
- 24 of mammal and 12 of bird species are
globally threatened. - Biodiversity is richest in tropical forests
- 300 species of trees in a single ha plot
- 10,000 species of insects on a single tree in
Peru - 43 species of ants on a single tree in Peru
30Reasons for the Decline
- One of the greatest sources of loss is the
physical alteration of habitats through the
processes of conversion, fragmentation, and
simplification. - Responsible for 36 of extinctions
31Conversions
- Natural areas are converted to farms, housing
subdivisions, shopping malls, marinas, and
industrial centers. - Any loss of natural habitat can result in only
one thing a proportional reduction in all
populations that require the habitat.
32Fragmentation
- Natural landscapes generally have large patches
of habitat - Human-dominated areas have small patches-
fragmented - Plowed fields
- House lots
- highway
- Can cause populations to fall below their
critical number - Kirtlands warbler
33Simplification and Intrusion
- Human use of habitats often simplifies them
- Channelized streams
- Tree farming
- Intrusion of habitats also causes a decline in
biodiversity - Television towers
- Attract birds
- Kills 5-50 million a year
34The Population Connection
- Loss of biodiversity can be attributed to the
expansion of the human population over the globe. - Loss is greatest in the developing world
- Africa and Asia have lost almost 2/3 of their
natural habitat
35Pollution
- Can directly kill many plants and animals
- Ex) The dead zone of the Mississippi River
- Oil spills, acid deposition, human wastes, and
pesticides also affect biodiversity - Increase in temperature
- Melting of polar icecaps
- Decrease in polar bear population
- These problems can be traced to the
industrialized world.
36- What is the Dead Zone?
- Every summer in the Gulf of Mexico an area,
sometimes as large as Massachusetts, becomes void
of life due to severely depleted levels of oxygen
in the Gulf's water, a state known as hypoxia.
This condition kills every oxygen-dependent sea
creature within its 8,500 square mile zone. The
Dead Zone varies in size, but it has been growing
steadily since 1993.
37- The Dead Zone is caused by excess nitrogen and
phosphorous that is washed into the Gulf from the
Mississippi River. These nutrients ignite huge
algae and phytoplankton blooms. As the blooms
die, they drop to the ocean floor and decompose,
using up the oxygen of the deeper water.
38- The stratification of the water that occurs
during the summer in the Gulf prevents the
deepest water from becoming reoxygenated. As a
direct result, oxygen levels fall below 2 parts
per million, a level that most marine life cannot
survive, including all commercial fish, crab and
shrimp species. The Dead Zone is now one of the
largest hypoxic zones of water in the world.
39- Frog deformities, caused by the larval stage of
a flatworm that invades the tadpoles - This rapid rise in the incidence of deformities
due to habitats that have been altered by human
use. - High N pollution
- Leads to large snail populations
- Which are intermediate hosts of the flatworm
Parasites A tiny trematode appears to cause a
significant amount of the leg deformities in
amphibians, as it works through a complex
ecological cycle that at various times includes
aquatic snails, amphibians and birds. The
parasite can form a cyst in frogs and disrupt
normal limb development.
40Exotic Species
- Exotic species is a species introduced into an
area different from its original habitat. - Can become invasive and can eliminate native
species by predation and competition - Examples of exotic species include kudzu, autumn
olive, multiflora rose, Brazilian pepper and
oriental bittersweet - Annual cost of invasive species in the U.S. is
137 billion
41Aquaculture
- One-third of all seafood consumed worldwide is
produced by aquaculture - The farming of shellfish, seaweed, and fish
- Most are not native to the farming locations
- Parasites and pathogens have been introduced
together with the aquaculture species. - Escape from farming locations
- Become invasive
42Overuse
- Removing species faster than they can reproduce
will lead to ultimate extinction - Overuse is responsible for 23 of extinction
- One form of overuse is the trafficking of
wildlife - Much of this trade is illegal
- 12 billion a year is made by this
- It flourishes because some people are willing to
pay large amounts of money for the luxuries
provided by the species
43eBay sting
- Recently an agent purchased an African leopard
skin and a frozen stillborn tiger cub for 1,500
on eBay - Poor management is another cause of the loss of
biodiversity - Without policies, forests and woodlands are
overcut and animals are overhunted
44Consequences of Losing Biodiversity
- It is possible to lose keystone species
- Species whose role is absolutely vital to the
survival of many other species in an ecosystem - Can be a predator that keeps herbivore
populations under control - It is also possible to introduce species that can
become new dominants in ecosystems - Can produce undesirable results
4510.4 Protecting Biodiversity
- Serious efforts are being made to preserve
biodiversity around the world, especially in the
tropics - World Conservation Union (IUCN) maintains a Red
List of Threatened Species - Similar to the endangered species list
- Uses a set of criteria to evaluate the risk of
extinction to thousands of species throughout the
world - There are currently 11,167 species on it
46C.I.T.E.S.
- Established in the early 1970s
- It is an international agreement that focuses on
trade in wildlife and wildlife parts. - Covers 30,000 species
- The best-known act of CITES was to ban the
international trade in ivory in 1990 in order to
stop the rapid decline of the African elephant
47Convention on Biological Diversity
- CBD became one of the pillars of the 1992 Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro. - The Biodiversity Treaty was ratified in December
1993 - Its is a convention that sets goals for
participating countries to sustain biodiversity
48Basic guidelines for the Biodiversity Treaty
- A concern for the intrinsic value of biodiversity
- Its significance for human welfare
- The sovereignty of a nation over its biodiversity
- The nations obligations to protect and conserve
biodiversity
49Stewardship Concerns
- Four policies that focus on improving
biodiversity - Reform policies that lead to declines in
biodiversity - Address the need of people who live adjacent to
or in high-biodiversity areas or whose livelihood
is derived from exploiting wild species - Practice conservation
- Promote more research on biodiversity
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