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Threatened, Endangered and Extinct Species

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Loss of organisms that could supply new medications. Biodiversity ... Parasitism one species, the parasite, feeds on a second organism the host ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Threatened, Endangered and Extinct Species


1
Threatened, Endangered and Extinct Species
  • Standard 4.7

2
How many species are on Earth?
  • Scientists identified about 1.75 million
  • Could be as many as 100 million
  • Species can appear and disappear

3
Extinction
  • An extinct species is one that no longer exists.
  • Extinction is a natural process.
  • The rate of extinction is increasing due to human
    activities such as pollution.
  • Removing organisms will change ecosystems.

4
Effects of Extinction
  • Causes a loss of animals that help cycle
    nutrients through the environment
  • Lose plants that provide food and oxygen
  • Loss of organisms that could supply new
    medications

5
Biodiversity
  • Biodiversity refers to the great variety of
    organisms on Earth
  • Three major levels
  • Genetic
  • Species
  • Ecosystem

6
Biodiversity
  • Also involves genetic variation within a
    particular species
  • Human Examples
  • Physical Traits hair color, height, eye color
    and susceptibility to disease

7
Pennsylvanias Biodiversity
  • More than 20,000 different species in PA
  • Besides animals other common organisms in PA
    include
  • Insects, plants, fungi and lichens
  • Scientists in PA are trying to maintain
    biodiversity by listing and monitoring as many
    species as possible.

8
Lichens
9
Pennsylvanias Biodiversity
10
Interactions Among Organisms
  • Remember the food web all organisms rely on
    other organisms
  • Predator-prey relationships help to keep an
    ecosystem in balance
  • An organism of one species (the predator) eats a
    living organism of a different species (the prey)
  • Examples polar bears eat fish, lions that eat
    zebras, robins that eat worms.

11
Examples Predator-Prey
12
Interactions Among Organisms
  • As the prey population increases, ecosystems can
    support more predators
  • As the prey population decreases, the lack of
    prey causes the predator population to decrease
  • This allows for a stable carrying capacity
  • This also allows the strongest and fittest
    members of the community to survive

13
Other relationships
  • Symbiosis organisms live closely together over
    a long period of time
  • Can be parasitic, mutualistic, or commensalistic

14
Other relationships
  • Parasitism one species, the parasite, feeds on
    a second organism the host
  • Parasite harms the host by living in or on it
  • Examples ticks or mosquitoes that live off of
    the host
  • Parasitism promotes ecosystem stability by
    preventing the populations of some organisms from
    becoming too large

15
Parasitism Example
16
Other relationships
  • Mutualism both species involved in the
    symbiotic relationship benefit
  • Examples
  • Bees and flowers bees feed on flower nectar,
    and spread flower pollen in the process
  • Lichens are two organisms, alga and fungus that
    grew together
  • The algae undergo photosynthesis and provide food
    for the fungi and itself while the fungi gathers
    water and minerals to share with the algae

17
Mutualism Example
18
Other relationships
  • Commensalism one organism benefits while the
    other is not affected
  • Example Trees in the rain forest block sunlight
    from reaching the ground, therefore plants such
    as orchids establish roots high in tree branches,
    growing through the high canopy to reach sunlight
  • The orchid can receive moisture and nutrients
    from the air and does not harm the tree

19
The Human Impact
  • When humans destroy habitats, kill off species or
    pollute the natural environment biodiversity
    often decreases
  • As a result ecosystems break down

20
Adaptations
  • Adaptation special modification or
    characteristic that helps an organism better
    survive in its environment, and which typically
    develops over time or may be passed down from one
    generation to another
  • Adaptations can be structural, or physical

21
Structural or Physical Adaptations
  • Examples desert plants with thick, wax-coated
    leaves
  • Predator birds bald eagles have keen eyesight
    and are capable of flying at great speeds in
    order to catch prey

22
Behavioral or Response Adaptations
  • Example An animal that cannot regulate its
    internal temperature, such as lizards or snakes,
    sit in the sun on cool days to warm itself
  • Retreats to its burrow on hot days to cool itself

23
Structural Adaptations
  • Structural adaptations - are physical
    characteristics that help an organism survive in
    its environment
  • They help animals to perform basic tasks, such as
    moving or eating
  • Examples Meat-eating animals have sharp
    incisors for killing prey
  • Plant eating animals have large, flat teeth that
    allow them to grind plants into pieces that are
    easily swallowed

24
Structural Adaptation Examples
  • Animals in deserts thousands of miles apart have
    the same types of adaptations
  • Plants that grow in the deep shade of forests
    have dark green leaves that increase their
    ability to catch any light that reaches the
    forest floor
  • Chameleon is a lizard that changes its color to
    match its surroundings at the time

25
Chameleon
26
Butterflies
  • Mimicry an adaptation in which one species
    copies the appearance or behavior of another
    species
  • Recall the Animal Camouflage Article
  • Viceroy butterfly protects itself by looking like
    the monarch butterfly, which birds avoid because
    of their bad taste

27
Adaptation Advantages
  • Decreases competition
  • Allows species niche to be different
  • Allows species survival

28
Behavioral Adaptations
  • The way an organism acts or responds to its
    environment in order to survive
  • Can be reflexive or instinctive

29
Reflexive Behaviors
  • A behavior that is triggered automatically by
    something outside an organism
  • The behavior happens without the organism
    thinking about it
  • Example Pulling your hand off of something hot
  • Example Running from a loud noise

30
Instinctive Behaviors
  • A behavior that an organism carries out because
    it is genetically prone to do so
  • These are natural reactions
  • Examples Traveling in a group (safety in
    numbers)
  • To look bigger and more frightening a blowfish
    expands its body with air
  • Male bioluminescent fireflies flash light to
    attract females

31
Other Adaptations
  • Hibernation animals decrease their activity
    during winter months after constant eating during
    the fall
  • Estivation to avoid the heat of summer some
    frogs, lizards and ground squirrels sleep through
    the summer in a dormant state

32
Other Adaptations
  • Migration allows animals to find more favorable
    climates or feeding conditions after a change in
    climate

33
Courtship Rituals
  • Instinctive behaviors because they encourage
    animal reproduction
  • Male birds use songs to attract female birds
  • Structural adaptations
  • Male peacock struts using his colorful tail
    feathers so females will notice him

34
Survival of the Fittest
  • Which will survive in the snowy climate of
    northern Alaska?
  • White rabbit with long thick fur or
  • Gray rabbit with short fur

35
Natural Selection
  • Most helpful traits are passed on to future
    generations Charles Darwin
  • Process that makes it more likely that organisms
    with the best characteristics for survival in a
    specific environment will survive, reproduce, and
    pass on their advantageous genetic traits to
    offspring

36
Populations
  • In order to evolve so the most advantageous
    adaptations become common three things must
    happen
  • Trait must vary within the species
  • The adaptation must be one that parents can pass
    on to offspring genetically
  • One version of the adaptation must benefit the
    members to that they survive and reproduce more
    than the members who do not have it
  • May occur quickly or take millions of years

37
Amazing Adaptations
  • Ice fish
  • Evolved to have no red blood cells and no
    hemoglobin
  • Oxygen dissolves in the blood
  • Allows fish to survive in the extreme cold

38
Human Impact
  • Negative
  • Destroying habitat
  • Polluting rivers, lakes
  • Positive
  • Repair damage already done
  • Protect whole ecosystems (conserve plants and
    animals)
  • Maintain biodiversity
  • Wildlife refuges
  • Protect endangered species

39
Protecting Endangered Species
  • Government protected habitats
  • Bred in captivity and then returned to wild
  • Examples bald eagle, California condor
  • Restrictions to hunting

40
Bald Eagle
  • In 1700s population of 100,000 in 1970 population
    of less than 3,000
  • Cause unregulated hunting and habitat
    destruction, DDT pesticide
  • DDT caused eagles to produce eggs with shells
    that were too thin
  • Solution Government protected eagles nest,
    bred in zoos, banned use of DDT
  • Population increased but still endangered

41
Bald Eagle
42
PABS
  • Pennsylvania Biological Survey (PABS)
  • Helps to maintain states biodiversity
  • Tracks and monitors plants and animals
  • Coordinates programs, surveys and research on PA
    wildlife
  • Developing bio-reserves throughout PA
  • Help conserve ecosystems throughout the state

43
Endangered Species Act
  • ESA US law that governs the protection of
    species whose populations are in decline and
    could be in danger of extinction
  • The law forbids hunting, killing, collecting or
    harming of species listed as endangered or
    threatened.
  • 3 categories
  • Threatened, Endangered, Extinct

44
ESA Categories
  • Threatened
  • A species that still has many individuals in the
    wild but whose numbers are dwindling to a point
    at which the species could become endangered
  • Example Green snake
  • Endangered
  • A species that has so few individuals remaining
    that extinction is a possibility in the near
    future
  • Example Delmarva fox squirrel

45
ESA Categories
  • Extinct
  • A species that no longer exists
  • Example Passenger pigeon

46
Factors Prone to Extinction
  • Specific food requirements
  • Specific habitat or nesting requirements
  • High on food chain or food web
  • These animals are more vulnerable to pollution
  • Migration
  • Reproduce a low rate
  • Limited habitat range
  • Interference with human activities

47
Help for Species in Danger
  • National Marine Fisheries Service and US Fish and
    Wildlife Service
  • Propose species the ESA will protect
  • Can delist species if species is no longer in
    need of protection
  • Happened to bald eagle in 1999
  • Humans have accelerated extinction between 1,000
    and 10,000 times
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