Title: Chapter 23 Lecture
1Chapter 23 Lecture
- Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity
2What are the Major Types of U.S. Public Lands?
- Multiple Use Lands
- National Forest System
- National Resource Lands.
- Moderately Restricted-Use Lands
- National Wildlife Refuges
- Restricted-Use Lands
- National Park System
- National Wilderness Preservation System
3How Should U.S. Public Lands Be Managed?
- The four following principles from environmental
economists and free-market economists (Aldo
Leopolds Land Ethics) - Protect biodiversity, habitats, and ecological
functioning should be number 1 goal. - No one should receive subsidies or tax breaks for
using or extracting resources on public lands. - American people deserve fair compensation for the
use of their property. - All users of extractors of resources on public
lands should be fully responsible for any
environmental damage caused.
4How Should U.S. Public Lands Be Managed?
- Economists, developers, and resource extractors
view public lands in the following ways - Their usefulness in providing mineral, timber,
and other resources - The ability to increase short-term economic
growth - Encourage the US Congress to pass a variety of
anti-environmental laws
5What Are the Major Types of Forests?
- Forests with 50 or more tree cover occupies
about 32 of the earths land surface - Can be classified as
- Old-Growth Forests uncut forests or regenerated
forests that have not been seriously disturbed by
human activities or nature disasters - Second-Growth Forests stands of trees from
areas where trees were once removed by human
activities such as clear cutting or natural
forces such as fire, hurricanes, or volcanic
eruptions. - Tree Plantations managed tracts with uniformly
aged tress of one species.
6What Are the Major Types of Forest Management?
- Even-aged Management involves maintaining trees
in a give stands at about the same size and age. - Uneven aged Management involves the
maintaining of a variety of species in a stand at
many ages and sizes to foster natural
regeneration. - Goals of Biological diversity
- Long-term sustainable production
- Selective cutting of individual or mature trees
- Multiple use of the forest
7How Are Trees Harvested?
- Build roads for access and timber removal
- Increased erosion and sediment runoff
- Habitat fragmentation and biodiversity loss
- Exposure of forests to invasion by nonnatives
- Opening of once-inaccessible forests to farmers,
miners, etc. - Logging roads cannot be protected as wilderness.
8How Are Trees Harvested?
- Selective cutting cut singly or in small groups
- Reduced crowding
- Encourages growth of younger trees
- Maintains an uneven-aged stand or different
species. - Allows natural regeneration from the surrounding
trees - Can be used to remove diseased tress
- Can protect the site for soil erosion and wind
damage - Allows a forest to be used for multiple purposed.
- High-grading the cutting and removing of only
the largest and best. - Reduces the forest canopy
- Causes the forest floor to become warmer, drier,
and more flammable. - Increases erosion of the forests thin and
nutrient-poor soil
9How Are Trees Harvested?
- Shelterwood Cutting - removes all mature trees in
two to three cuttings over a period of ten yeas. - Seed-tree Cutting harvests nearly all a stands
trees in one cutting, leaving a few uniformly
distributed seed-producing trees - Clear-cutting removes all of the trees from an
area in a single cutting. - Strip-cutting clear-cutting a strip of trees
along the contour of the land to allow natural
regeneration within a few years
10Positive and Negative Sides of Clear Cutting
- POSITIVE
- Increases timber yield per hectare
- Permits reforesting with genetically improved
stocks - Shortens time to establish a new stand of trees
- Takes less skill and planning
- Maximum economic return in the shortest time.
- If done carefully and responsibly is the best way
to harvest tree plantations for some species. - NEGATIVE
- Leaves moderate to large forest openings
- Eliminates most recreational value for decades
- Disrupts biodiversity destroys and fragments
wildlife habitat - Makes nearby trees more vulnerable to being blown
down - Leads to severe soil erosion, sediment water
pollution, and flooding on steep slopes.
11What Is Happening to the Worlds Forests?
- Forests are renewable resources as long as the
rate of cutting and degradation does not exceed
the rate of regrowth. - How Can Forests Be Managed More Sustainably?
- Grows timber on long rotations
- Emphasizes selective cutting, strip cutting, not
clear-cutting on steep slopes - Minimize fragmentation
- Reduce road building in uncut forest areas
- Use road building and logging methods that
minimize soil erosion and compaction. - Leave most standing dead trees and fallen timber
- Timber grown by sustainable methods certified and
labeled by outside certifying groups - Includes the estimated ecological services in
economic value.
12How Can Pathogens and Insects Affect Forests
- Ways to reduce the impact of tree diseases and of
insects on forests - Preserve biodiversity
- Ban imported timber
- Remove infected and infested trees, clearing,
burning - Treating diseased trees with antibiotics
- Developing tree species that are
disease-resistant - Applying pesticides
- Using integrated pest management.
-
13How Can Fires Affect Ecosystems?
- Fires can be important
- Maintain the vegetations of many ecosystems at a
certain stage of ecological succession fires
burn away the low-lying vegetation and small
trees a burst of new vegetation follows. - Surface fires usually burn only undergrowth and
leaf litter on the forest floor. Kill seedlings
and small trees but spare most mature trees and
allow most wild animals to escape. - Crown fires extremely hot fires might start on
the ground, but eventually burn whole trees and
leap from top to top.
14How Can We Protect Forests From Fire?
- Prevention
- Requiring burning permits
- Closing all parts of a forest and camping during
periods of drought and high fire danger - Educating the public
- Smokey Bear! prevent forest fires, save lives,
prevent billions in losses - Prescribed burning setting controlled ground
fires - Presuppression early detection and control of
fires - Suppression fighting fires once they have
started.
15How Do Air Pollution and Climate change Threaten
Forests?
- At high elevations and those downwind from urban
and industrial centers are exposed to a variety
of air pollutants that can harm trees - Reduce emissions of the offending pollutants
- Regional climate change brought about by global
warmning - Increase the threat of forest fires in areas that
may get less precipitations - Cause some types of tree species to die out in
some areas.
16Why Should We Care About National Forests?
- Economic
- Supply timber
- Serve as grazing lands
- Provide minerals, oil, and natural gas
- Contain network of roads
- Ecological
- o Provide habitat for almost 200 threatened and
endangered species - o Principle habitats for pollinator species
- o Provide some of the cleanest drinking water.
- Recreational
- Recreation, hunting, fishing
17How Should U.S. National Forests Be Managed?
- Sustainable Yield trees cant be harvested or
used faster than they are replenished - Multiple Use each of the forests should be
managed for a variety of uses such as sustainable
timber harvesting, recreation, livestock grazing,
watershed protection, and wildlife. - In 2001, Bush increased the sale of timber in
national forests by 40, moved to block road
construction in roadless areas of the national
forest eliminated the requirement that the
forest service manage national forests to protect
the viability of wildlife and ecological
sustainability. Created the idea of charter
forests.
18Battle Between Environmentalists and Timber
Companies
- Environmentalists
- Timber-cutting program Loses Money
- Logging in national forests causes more harm than
good to local communities near such forests
Communties relying on national forest timber
sales experience economic slumps. - Costs the taxpayers in logging subsidies and
cleaning of pollutions It would save taxpayers
money. - Only provides about 3 of the countries wood is
from National Forests - Ample private forestland is available to meet the
countries demand for wood - Below costs is not good for other forests and has
little effect on the consumer - Recreation in national forests provides more
jobs. - Timber Companies say
- Helps satisfy the countrys demand for food
- Provides cheap timber that benefits consumers
- Improves forest health, fires
- Provides jobs and stimulates economic growth.
19How Can We Cut Fewer Trees by Using Wood More
Efficiently?
- 60 of the wood consumed is wasted
- o inefficient use of construction materials
- o excess packaging
- o Overuse of junk mail
- o Inadequate paper recycling
- Failure to reuse wooden shipping containers
- o Packaging (50)
- o Writing and printing (30)
- o Newsprint (12)
- o Paper tissues and towels (8)
- Only 3 of softwood production comes from
national forests
20How Can We Cut Fewer Trees by Making Paper from
Tree-Free Fibers?
- Tree-free fibers
- From agricultural residues from crops
- From fast growing crops
- Account for 7 of the worlds fiber supply for
paper - less than 1 in the US
- China uses tree-free pulp makes 60 of paper
- Made from kenaf in the US
- 3 5X the cost however, supply and demand
21Why Is It Difficult to Determine Deforestation?
- Interpretation of satellite images
- Different ways of defining forests
- Political and economic factors
- Why Should We Care About Tropical Forests?
- Economic and ecological services
- Their instrumental values
- Chemicals
- Uses
22Case Study Madagascar
- 85 of the plant and animals species re endemic
species unique to the island - Lost of habitat due to slash and burn agriculture
and rapid population growth - Many species face extinction
- Large erosion
23What Is Cultural Extinction?
- Indigenous cultures who used the land sustainably
are vanishing - This is an irreplaceable loss of ecological
knowledge and cultural diversity - They know how to live sustainably
- They know which plants are useful as food and
medicines.
24Solutions to Deforestation and Degradation
- Solutions
- New settlers who know how to practice small-scale
sustinable agriculture and forestry - Debt for Nature Swaps
- Conservation Easements
- Conservation Concessions
- International System for Evaluating Timber
produced by sustainable methods - Gentler methods for harvesting trees
- National and global efforts to reforest and
rehabilitate
25Fuelwood Crisis
- Developing countries use wood to meet their
energy needs - They have not had enough to meet their needs
- They burn charcoal because it is lighter and
cheaper - They must travel far distances, expensive, more
disease, burn dung and crop residues - Solutions
- Plant more fast growing fuelwood trees
- Switch to other fuels (root-fuel plants)
26How are Parks Threatened?
- Only 1 of the parks in developing countries
receive protections - become paper parks - Popularity
- Lack of Funds
- Lack of law enforcement
- Suffer from nonnative specie
- Nearby human activity threatens wildlife and
recreational values
27How Can Management of US Parks Be Improved?
- Currently under the principle of Natural
Regulation - managed as if they are wilderness
ecosystems that can adapt and sustain themselves.
- Goals and Ideas
- Preserve nature
- Make parks available to the public, but limit
visitors and raise entry fees - Require integrated management plans for parks
- Increase the budget - more maintenance and
repairs, more park rangers at higher pay - Encourage donations, ask for volunteers
- Provide transportation
- Give private concessionaries
28What Principles Should Be Used to Establish and
Manage Nature Reserves?
- Ecosystems are rarely stable
- Ecosystems and communities that experience fairly
frequent but moderate disturbances have the
greatest diversity of species - We should view most at habitat islands.
29How Should Nature Reserves Be Designed?
- Shape - Circular or Elongated?
- Single Large or Several Small Reserves?
- Heterogenous or Homogeneous?
- Isolated or Connected
- What about Buffer Zones?
30What is Gap Analysis?
- Gap Analysis - determines whether existing
networks or nature reserves provide enough
protection for native plant and animal species. - Maps of topography
- Databases of biological information
- Superimpose the species data onto the maps
- Use this information to close gaps
- Conservation Gaps - where there is a lack of
adequate protection.
31What Areas Should Receive Top Priority for
Establishing Reserves?
- 25 Hot Spots
- Mostly tropical forests
- Contain 60 of the biodiversity
32Wilderness - Why Preserve It?
- Wilderness - areas of undeveloped land affected
primarily by the forces of nature, where man is a
visitor who does not remain. - Why preserve?
- Beauty of nature!
- Just to know it is there is comforting
- Centers of evolution
- Undisturbed areas
- A natural laboratory
- Wild species have a right to exist and play their
roles in earth.
33Fixing Ecosystems
- Restoration - trying to return it to its
predegraded state - Let nature do most of the work
- Remove pollutants, add nutrients, add topsoil,
remove nonnative species - Reintroduce species
- Prevention from further damage
- Monitor area
- Difficulties include
- Lack of knowledge about previous composition
- Changes in climate
- Ecosystem is changing
- Rehabilitation - an attempt to restore some of
the degraded systems species and ecosystem
functions. - Replacement - replace a degraded ecosystem
- Create Artificial Ecosystems
34What Are The Next Steps?
- Preserve hot spots
- Keep forests intact
- Cease all logging of old-growth forests
- Concentrate on protecting lakes and river systems
- Determine marine hot spots
- Continue to map the worlds biodiversity
- Make conservation profitable