Title: SUSTAINING WILD SPECIES
1CHAPTER 18
2The Passenger Pigeon gone forever
- Reasons for extinction of species
- uncontrolled commercial hunting
- lost of habitat and food supply
- Passenger pigeon hunting was big business
- Last pigeon was shot in 1990
- All species will eventually become extinct -
- but human activity -- premature extinctions
3The Rise and Fall of SpeciesWhat are endangered
threatened species?
- Local extinction - organism is no longer in a
specific area - but exists elsewhere - Ecological extinction - low numbers -- inability
to fill ecological role - Biological extinction - species is no longer
found anywhere on earth - Endangered species - could become extinct
- Threatened species could become endangered
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5Characteristics of vulnerable species
- K-strategist characteristics
- Limited habitat
- Small population size low density
- Large body size
- Specialized niche
- Low reproductive rate
- Other characteristics
- fixed migrations, top of food chain, high
economic value to man
6Numbers of threatened species
- Estimates by IUCC and WWF - probably low
estimates - (notice which are highest, etc.,
but dont attempt to memorize list) - Species whose numbers are diminished locally are
indicators of condition of ecosystem as a whole -
these are the indicator species
7Reasons for saving wild species
- Important scientific, ecological, economic,
medical, aesthetic and recreational value - Provides knowledge of evolution
- Provide ecological services
- Wild strains needed for domesticated strains
- Pollination
- Economic benefits from products
8Reasons for saving wild species - 2
- Plant-based medicines in developing areas and in
developed countries (including anti- cancer drugs - Wild organisms provide beauty, etc.
- Ecotourism benefits travel industry
- Ethical importance - range of views from every
species has a right to exist without human
interference to Some are needed, but others
are
9Background vs. Mass extinctions
- Background is natural rate of extinctions
- Mass extinction is catastrophic and widespread
global climate changes wipe out many species - Fossil evidence shows 5 great mass extinctions
- Each extinction was followed by adaptive
radiations
10A Mass Extinction Crisis?
- Conservation biologists say that current
extinction rate is thousands times background
rate - Difference between current past mass
extinctions - it is occurring in decades rather than ???
- degradation of biologically diverse environment
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13Causes of depletion and premature extinctions
- Human population growth
- Failure to value environment and ecological
services - Affluence and economic growth -- increased per
capita resource use - Human appropriation of earths net primary
productivity - Poverty -- cut forests, overgraze fish etc
14Role of habitat loss, degradation fragmentation
- Greatest threat major areas rainforests, coral
reefs, wetlands, grasslands and waters - Island species (endemic) highly vulnerable
- Island biogeography extended to parks, etc. which
become habitat islands - Habitat fragmentation due to decreases in
sustainable populations, increases in edge areas,
barriers limit dispersal
15Deliberately (or accidentally) introduced species
- Nonnative or alien species
- 70 of food comes from nine crops cultivated
outside of natural ranges - Biological pollution - introduced species are
uncontrolled by natural predators, competitors,
parasites or pathogens - Established introduced species impossible to
remove
16Accidentally introduced species
- Examples are
- zebra and quagga mussels
- fire ants from S. America
- brown tree snake entered Guam
- Formosan termite
17Commercial hunting and poaching
- 12 billion/year illegal international trade of
endangered animals (or parts) - Organized crime
- Endangered animals bring high prices
- What about elephant protection? Elephant
populations in protective areas are destroying
habitat affects other species - Should ban be lifted?
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21Predator and Pest Control
- Extermination of species which compete for human
food or game Carolina fruit eating parakeet,
elephants, coyotes, prairie dogs (followed by
loss of ferret which feeds on prairie dogs
22Exotic pets and decorative plants
- Many animals die for each animal sold
- Animals taken from natural habitat die or dont
reproduce in natural habitat -- income from
tourists - Methods used to capture animals (e.g. tropical
fish) destroy habitat (e.g. coral reef)
23Climate change and pollution
- Deforestation and accumulation of heat-trapping
gases will hurt wildlife even in well-managed
reserves and sanctuaries - Pesticides and acid deposition
- Ozone depletion -- skin cancers, cataracts,
impairs immune system
24Over fishing
- 60 of commercially valuable fish are over-fished
(tragedy of the commons) - Trawlers with huge nets which kill many species
other than ones sought destroy habitats -
largest human-caused disturbance to biosphere - purse-seine fishing, long-lining, and drift-net
fishing
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26Threats to Aquatic life - how serious?
- Greatest danger is to fresh water species
especially near Europe and Asia - Major causes of decline
- habitat loss degradation (disruption of rivers)
- nonnative species invasions
- over-harvesting - commercial
- Marine losses over-fishing, coral reef
destruction, dolphin seal mangrove loss,
toxic red tides and sedimentation
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28Protection of wildlife and diversity
- Three basic approaches emphasize
- ecosystems
- preserve balanced populations, establish
wilderness areas and reserves, reduce nonnatives - species
- identify species and give legal protection,
preserve their habitats propagate in captivity
and return to native habitats - wildlife management
- regulate hunting, establish harvest quotas,
develop population management plans,
international treaties
29International treaties and laws
- Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species - 1975 - 145 nations signed protecting
700 species enforcement is spotty and fines are
small - U.S. import and export laws Lacey Act (1900) and
Endangered Species Act (1973, 1982, 1988) -
federal agencies cannot fund projects which
jeopardize listed species
30International treaties and laws -2
- Critical habitat protection
- Limitation of entry ports
- Habitat conservation plans - compromise amendment
benefiting landowners - Safe harbor agreements provides technical help
from conservation agencies - Candidate conservation agreements - help with
preservation of declining species
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32Should Endangered Species Act be weakened or
strengthened?
- Opponents say act causes economic loss - they are
trying to weaken the laws (5 ways) - such as
giving landowners more options and giving them
compensations - Conservationists say act addresses economic
concerns new system to protect and sustain
biological diversity is needed - identify species
and ecosystems protect those in danger and
provide to landowners
33Should all endangered species be protected?
- Maybe concentrate on those with best chance for
survival, have most ecological value, and are
potentially useful - But do we know enough to make these value
judgements? - Protection of some species puts others at risk,
e.g. lions and sea lions
34Wildlife refuges and other protected areas
- 1903 - President Theodore Roosevelt - 1st U.S.
federal wildlife refuge - Now 508 refuges - most are wetlands for migratory
waterfowl - Conservation biologists want more
- No guidelines for management of National Wildlife
Refuge system --abuses occur, e.g. Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge
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36Gene banks, botanical gardens, zoos
- How to preserve endangered species
- Gene and seed banks preserve genetic information
- Botanical gardens and arboreta
- Captive breeding programs egg pulling,
artificial insemination, surgical implantation
cross fostering - Zoos and research centers - critical mass
required to maintain biological evolution
37Wildlife Management
- Manipulating wildlife populations and their
habitats for their welfare and for human benefit - Supported by hunting and fishing licenses and
sometimes state income taxes - How to decide what is preserved where
- Ecologists want to save biodiversity
- Wildlife conservationists - save specific species
38Wildlife Management -2
- After goals are set - then a management plan
based upon - ecological succession
- wildlife population dynamics
- an understanding of the habitat requirements
- How to manipulate vegetation and water supplies -
control ecological succession - Wildlife species early, mid-, late successional
species
39Wildlife Management -3
- Wildlife species are categorized based upon what
type of habitat they prefer - early successional species
- midsuccessional species
- late successional species
- wilderness species
- Manage habitat to encourage habitation of desired
species
40Sport hunting and wildlife management
- Licensed hunters are permitted to hunt in
designated areas at designated times w/ bag
limits - Proponents say hunting keeps populations within
manageable limits, provides recreation and
benefits economy - Opponents say populations would be controlled if
natural predators were not killed
41Management of migratory waterfowl
- Flyways are migratory routes - often protected by
treaties - Populations managed by hunting restrictions,
habitat maintenance - Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp Act
of 1934 - duck stamp sales provide for purchase
of land and easements for habitats
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43Fishery Managementmarine biodiversity protection
- Develop commercial and sport fish species
- Reduce populations of less desirable species
- Regulate fishing seasons and catch size
- Create and/or maintain habitats encourage health
of desired species
44Fishery Managementmarine biodiversity
protection-2
- Exclusive economic zones - offshore fishing zone
- foreign fishers may fish only with countrys
permission and catch is limited - High seas - ocean more than 370 kilometers from
any country - limits set by international
maritime law - Overfishing is a problem - unsustainable
- What are 4 suggestions to control it?
- Why is it difficult to protect marine
biodiversity?
45The Whaling Industry
- An example of the tragedy of the commons
- Two groups baleen and toothed whales
- feeding differences
- easily killed why are they killed?
- Slowly renewable resource - Why?
- How to manage the populations - International
Whaling Commission - Should the ban be lifted? Why? Why not?
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