Title: BIODIVERSITY
1BIODIVERSITY
- Genes, Species and Ecosystems
2 3Biodiversity
- The variety of genes, species and ecosystems.
- Genetic Diversity
- Species Diversity
- Ecosystem Diversity
4Diversity
- Richness
- How many different types
- Richness and Evenness
- How many different types and spread of abundance
of each type
STREAM ONE 97 Chironomus 1 Simulium 1 Tabanus 1
Annelida
STREAM TWO 25 Chironomus 25 Simulium 25
Tabanus 25 Annelida
5Genetic Diversity
- Variability in the genetic make-up of different
individuals of the same species
6Importance of Genetic Diversity?
7Species Diversity
- Richness and evenness of species.
8Ecosystem Diversity
- Variety of types of ecosystems present on the
planet
9World-Views and the Value of Biodiversity
- What are some reasons a utilitarian (someone with
anthropocentric world-view) value biodiversity?
10Why would a utilitarian value biodiversity?
- Food
- genetic diversity for green revolution comes from
wild strains - new species that could be human food crops
- crops that could grow under high salt conditions
- crops that could grow under drought conditions
- crops that could produce more
11Why would a utilitarian value biodiversity?
- Drugs and Medicine
- rosy periwinkle in Madagascar childhood leukemia
treatment - pre-rosy periwinkle 100 fatality
- post-rosy periwinkle remission rate 99
- new anti-virals
12Drugs and Medicine A short check-list
- penicillin -- fungus -- antibiotic
- bacitracin, erythromycin, tetracycline --
bacterium --antibiotic - digitalis -- foxglove -- heart stimulant
- quinine -- chincona bark -- anti-malarial
- diosgenin -- Mexican yam -- birth-control drug
- cortisone -- Mexican yam -- anti-inflammatory
- cytarabine -- sponge -- leukemia treatment
- reserpine -- rauwolfia -- hypertension drug
- allantoin -- blowfly larva -- wound healer
- morphine -- poppy -- pain killer
13Why would a utilitarian value biodiversity?
- Ecosystem Benefits
- biological control of pests, pollination, food
production - decomposition, recycling, flood control, drought
reduction, erosion control - Aesthetic and Cultural Benefits
- Puffin breeding near Bar Harbor, ME --gt gt10,000
puffin watchers on cruises in 3 months of 1997 - 5.8 Billion spent by bird watchers alone in US
14The Worth of Ecosystems
- Worldwide 16-54 trillion/yr
- Human produced wealth18 trillion/yr
- ? Johnstown Crk, OR
- 15 million over 100 yrs
15What are the threats to biodiversity?
16The threats...
- habitat loss
- exploitation
- hunting
- fishing
- fur trapping
- commercial products
- habitat degradation
- pollution
- exotic species
- predators and pest control
- genetic assimilation
17Outcome of these threats?
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19Habitat Loss
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21Megadiversity Areas
- high concentrations of endemic species (native to
the area) - Amazon Basin
- 20 of worlds vascular plant species
- Tropical Rainforests
- lt7 land area of world
- 50-75 of all the worlds species
- One tree in Panama 1200 species of beetles!
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23Exploitation
- Especially of the large, the slow and the tasty
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25Habitat Degradation Fragmentation
what might be some outcomes of this?
- Breaking habitats into smaller pieces, putting
roads through habitats, dividing habitats
26Habitat Degradation Pollution
27Orca Orcinus orca
- Dart collection of tissue for PCB analysis on 47
individuals - PCB concentrations in Orca
- --transient males 251 ppm
- --southern pods (feed on salmon) 146 ppm
- Human concentration 1 ppm
- EPA scientist nightmares about 16 ppm in river
28PCBS in Orca Orcinus orca
- Immune system deficiencies
- Developmental problems
- Endocrine disrupter?
- Pods is Southern Puget Sound dying
29Habitat Degradation Exotic Species
30Mosquitoes, brown tree snake, melaleuca tree,
nursery rainbow trout, yellow jacket, pigs, rats,
dogs, goats, mongooses, ginger, nile perch,
opossum shrimp, zebra mussel, green clam,
chestnut blight, elm disease, med fly, gypsy
moths, cats, rabbits
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32Biodiversity Conservation
- What organisms could YOU live without?
33Protecting Biodiversity
- Protect Habitat
- Parks, Preserves, Zoning Laws
- Protect Species
- US Endangered Species Act
- Hunting and Fishing Regulations
- CITES
- Preserve Genetic Information
- Zoos, Botanical Gardens
34Hunting and Fishing Laws
- usually species by species, location by location
- licenses often required to take a species,
thereby controlling number taken - regulations often limit take based on size and
sex and time of year
35U.S. Endangered Species Act
- Congress in 1973 recognized value of species in
ecosystem functions, sought to protect those
functions by protecting species
36Definitions
- endangered species
- imminent danger of extinction
- threatened species
- significant decline in numbers and may be on
verge in certain localities
37US ESA
- no takings of T E species
- no federal money spent on projects that could
harm T E - allows federal government to be sued if not
abiding by ESA - What do you think takings means here?
38US ESA (cont)
- US Fish and Wildlife Service
- lists T E species
- creates recovery plans for T E species
- minimum viable populations
- reviews projects for T E impact
- of the gt7000 projects reviewed 87-91 only 19
have been stopped or blocked. - Helps create Habitat Conservation Plans with
private land owners
39Environmental Regulations and the US Constitution
40US Constitution
- No person shall be deprived of life, liberty,
or property, without due process of law nor
shall private property be taken for public use,
without just compensation. - Jargon a takings is the government taking over
private property without paying for it.
41... nor shall private property be taken for
public use, without just compensation.
- Why in the Constitution?
- to permit the government to use private property
for public use - example, land needed for a public highway
private land can be used but only upon payment of
compensation - Jargon called the right of eminent domain or
condemnation.
42Are environmental regulations takings?
- Should landowners be compensated if they are
limited in what they can do with their land?
43Takings Law
- Early experience from England and Colonial
America ? simple regulations are NOT EQUAL TO a
government takings." - For example
- After a great fire in Boston in the late 17th
Century, a series of laws was enacted directing
the use of brick or stone in buildings. No
dwelling house could be constructed otherwise
upon threat of serious fine. - A later act declared that any building that did
not meet these standards was a nuisance subject
to demolition. - Owner not compensated, just forced to demolish.
44Takings Law
- Until the early 1900s, the "takings" clause was
thought not to apply to regulatory actions of
local governments. - 1920s, the U.S. Supreme Court held that if zoning
regulations went too far in restricting the use
of property, they could amount to a taking.
451920s Supreme Court Decisions
- L.A. banned brickmaking (soot, fumes, dust) from
a residential neighborhood (brickmaker could no
longer make bricks there). - RULED NOT A TAKING
- public needs overruled private, harmful,
inappropriate action - Approved Zoning Ordinance in Cleveland,
- even though change to residential zoning meant a
person lost the potential value of 75 of his
land because he could not sell it for industrial
use. - RULED NOT A TAKING
461920s Supreme Court Decisions
- Property was under contract to be sold as
industrial use, town wanted to change to
residential use. Owner was arguing that this was
a takings. - Based on particulars of the case, Court decided
land had no practical use as residential, - RULED IT WAS A TAKINGS because government desire
was illogical from practical view of specifics of
the area.
47The TEST Is it a Takings?
- 1. Is there an economic loss to owner because of
regulation? What is level of economic loss?
(total or partial)? - 2. Does regulation provide a valid public
concern? this can override economic loss - 3. What is character of government action?
Consistent? Fair? Equitable?
48Examples of things possible regulatory takings?
- Government prohibiting
- building in a wetland
- building a billboard on interstate highways
- junkyards
- trade in endangered species
- destruction of historic building
- Biogenetic experimentation
- Pesticide use
- Destruction of wildlife
- Air or water pollution
49Apply the Takings Test to
50Current Wetland examples from Law is divided
- Some courts have come out mostly in favor of
government regulation (as long as regulation was
logical in serving public welfare) and ruled NOT
A TAKINGS - Other courts have come out mostly in favor of
private wetland landowners and ruled regulation
WAS A TAKINGS - primarily when total economic loss was the
condition.
51Rights and Duties
- Every RIGHT is balanced by a DUTY (a
responsibility) - Right to own property
- Whose duty defends that right?
52CITES
- Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species - International agreement controlling TRADE in
endangered species
53Environmental Management
- For Biodiversity Conservation
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56Ecosystem Management
- Manage the system before restoration is needed.
- A Unified Approach, including
- economic goals
- ecological goals
- social goals
57Ecosystem Management
- Looks at Whole Region
- Pacific Northwest (rivers hydropower, salmon
indigenous fishers, military-industrial complex) - Attempts Sustainability of Whole
- economic systems
- ecosystems
- Combines SCIENCE and POLICY
- Compass Gyroscope
58Adaptive Management
Compass Pointing the Way
- That is the function of adaptive management
N
- treating economic uses of nature as experiments.
- learn efficiently from what is happening
(scientific knowledge). - react in a timely manner.
59Gyroscope
- Gives Balance to Human Concerns by Collective
Decision-Making between - Stakeholders
- Public
- Keeps Ecosystem Management on a Steady Track
60Edmund Burke
- Nobody makes a greater mistake than he who did
nothing because he could only do a little.
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62Wastewater Treatment
- Primary treatment
- let solids settle out
- sludge and primary treated water the results
- removes 50-75 of organic matter
- pathogens, dissolved organic matter remains
- Secondary treatment
- biological treatment of
63Wastewater Treatment
Secondary Treatment
Primary Treatment
Raw Sewage
BIOTREATMENT (Trickling Filter or Activated
Sludge)
Settling Tank
Sludge
Chlorination
To receiving water
64Wastewater Treatment (cont)
Secondary effluent with high nutrient content
(most common reason for tertiary treatment)
Tertiary Treatment
CHEMICAL TREATMENT sorption, precipitation revers
e osmosis, ion exchange, distillation
To Receiving Waters