Title: Biodiversity, Endangered Species, and Extinction
1Biodiversity, Endangered Species, and Extinction
2What is a species and how many are there?
- A species is a group of organisms that resemble
one another in appearance, behavior, chemistry,
and genetic make-up - The true test to determine if two individuals are
members of the same species is to see whether or
not viable (fertile) offspring can be produced
under natural conditions - We dont know how many exist on earth
- 1.5 to 1.8 million identified
- Estimates (save bacteria) are 3 to 100 million
- Most common are insects and plants
3What is biodiversity
- A renewable resource
- The different forms of life and life sustaining
processes that can best survive the variety of
habitats on earth - Four different types fall under biodiversity
- Genetic Diversity
- Species Diversity
- Ecological Diversity
- Functional Diversity
4Why is biodiversity important?
- The rich variety of genes, species, biological
communities, and life sustaining processes - Give us wood, fibers, energy, raw materials,
industrial chemicals, medicines etc that fuel our
economies (estimated _at_ 37 trillion/yr) - Purify our water, air, soil
- Decompose our organic and chemical wastes
recycle nutrients - Natural pest control and pollination
- Regulate climate, protect us from harmful
radiation - Production of all food
- Prevent soil erosion/flood control
- Detoxification of human and industrial wastes
5Who cares!? Its just one species!
- Every species today contains genetic information
that represents millions of years of evolution
and adaptation to earths changing environmental
conditions - This diversity also represents the raw materials
for future adaptations if environmental
conditions change - In other words, biodiversity is lifes insurance
policy against natural disaster! - Loss of biodiversity
- Reduces the availability of ecosystem services
- Decreases ability of species and ecosystems to
adapt to changing environmental conditions
6BiodiversitySpeciation minus extinction
- When environmental conditions change, a species
must either - Evolve (become better adapted) OR
- Move to a more favorable environment OR
- Cease to exist (become extinct)
- Extinction is the ultimate fate of all species
just as death is ultimate fate of all individuals - 99.9 of all of the species that have ever
existed are now extinct! - Background Rate vs. Mass Extinctions
7Extinctions over time
8Are humans currently causing a mass extinction?
- During 20th century, it has been estimated that
the extinction rate has increased 100 to 1000
times the natural background rate - We already use 27 of earths NPP
- 75 of habitable area disturbed
- World wide forest cover reduced by 20-50
- More than half of wetlands of the world
threatened - On our time scale, the loss of these species
cannot be recouped by formation of new species
(b/c this takes a long time) - Genetic engineering wont solve this (why?)
9Human Impacts on Extinction Rates
- Before humans, estimated rate was one species per
million ( 0.0001 per yr) - Now, best guess is 0.1 per yr (1000X background
rate) - If the rate is as high as 1 as some believe
(E.O. Wilson), then 20 of current animal and
plant species could be gone by 2030 and 50 gone
by the end of this century - At this rate, it will take at least 5 million
years for speciation to rebuild the diversity we
destroy during this century.
10Premature Extinctions Caused By Human Beings
Nature Conservancy Study 539 extinctions since
1600
11Underlying Causes of Extinction
12Human Impacts on Ecosystems
- Fragmenting and degrading habitat (stop)
- e.g. Tropical forests being cut at a rate of 0.6
to 2 per year - Half of remaining forests lost or degraded in 25
to 83yrs - Simplifying natural ecosystems
- Creating monocultures
- Using, wasting, or destroying an increasing
percentage of earths NPP (27 of total) - Strengthening some populations of pest species
and disease causing bacteria by causing genetic
resistance through overuse of pesticides
antibiotics - Eliminating some key predators
- Deliberately or accidentally introducing exotic
species - Over harvesting of renewable resources
- Interfering with normal cycling and flows of
energy in ecosystems
13Habitat Loss
14Poaching often Extinction
CITIES Treaty
15Endangered vs. Threatened
- Endangered
- So few left that species could soon become
extinct over all or most of its range - Threatened
- Still relatively abundant but b/c of declining
numbers is likely to become endangered in the
near future - WWF study 30k Under threat of extinction
- 34 of worlds fish
- 25 of worlds amphibians
- 24 of worlds mammals
- 20 of worlds reptiles
- 14 of worlds plant species
- 12 of worlds bird species
16Endangered and Threatened Part I
17Endangered and Threatened Part II
18Endangered and Threatened Part III
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19What makes a species vulnerable to extinction?
- Specialized niche
- Low reproductive rate
- Blue whales, giant panda, rhinoceros
- Feeds at high trophic level
- Bengal tiger, bald eagle
- Fixed migratory patterns
- Blue whale, whooping crane, sea turtles
- Commercially valuable
- Snow leopard, tigers, elephants, rare birds,
orchids - Rare/Narrow Distribution (island species)
- Need Large Territory
- Condor, Florida panther
20Types of Extinctions
- Local
- No longer in an area it once inhabited
- Ecological
- So few left that it cant do its job
- Biological
- No longer found anywhere on earth
21Status of Biodiversity
22Hot Spots of Biodiversity in the USA
23Why preserve wild species?
- Economic goods
- Food, fuel, lumber, fiber, paper, etc
- 40 of all medicines and 80 of top 150
prescription drugs in USA derived from living
organisms - Crops domesticated from wild plants
- Need genetic diversity to develop future crops
- Ecological services
- Genetic information
- Recreation
- Eco-tourism
- 1 male lion living to age 7550K or 1000 if
killed by a poacher for its skin - Ethical considerations
24Preserving Biodiversity
PRESERVE HOT SPOTS
25US Endangered Species Act (1973Nixon!)
- Provides a program for the conservation of
threatened and endangered plants and animals and
the habitats in which they are found - Dept of Interior maintains the list of 632
endangered species (over 50 plants) and 190
threatened species - Anyone can petition the US FWS to add a species
to the list (if it is in danger of extinction in
all or most of its range) - Can be listed b/c of habitat destruction,
overexploitation, disease/predation, inadequacy
of existing regulations, any human threat to its
continued existence - Law prohibits any action (either administrative
or real) that results in the taking of a
listed species OR ADVERSELY AFFECTS HABITAT - Illegal to take, possess, sell, transport listed
sp. - Recovery Plan is written for each species
- Provides for acquire land that preserves these
species
26CITIES
- Convention on International Trade In Endangered
Species - Is an international agreement between
Governments. Its aim is to ensure that
international trade in specimens of wild animals
and plants does not threaten their survival - Annually, international wildlife trade is
estimated to be worth billions of dollars and to
include hundreds of millions of plant and animal
specimens. - The trade is diverse, ranging from live animals
and plants to a vast array of wildlife products
derived from them, including food products,
exotic leather goods, wooden musical instruments,
timber, tourist curios and medicines. - Levels of exploitation of some animal and plant
species are high and the trade in them, together
with other factors, such as habitat loss, is
capable of heavily depleting their populations
and even bringing some species close to
extinction. - Many wildlife species in trade are not
endangered, but the existence of an agreement to
ensure the sustainability of the trade is
important in order to safeguard these resources
for the future. - Voluntary adherence
- CITES works by subjecting international trade in
specimens of selected species to certain
controls. These require that all import, export,
re-export and introduction from the sea of
species covered by the Convention has to be
authorized through a licensing system.