Title: Sustaining Biodiversity: The Ecosystem Approach
1Sustaining Biodiversity The Ecosystem Approach
2What are the major threats to forest ecosystems?
3Forests vary in their age, make-up, and origins
- Natural and planted forests occupy about 30 of
the earths land surface (excluding Greenland and
Antarctica). - Two major types based on their age and structure
- Old growth forest Uncut or regenerated primary
forest that has not been seriously disturbed by
human activities or natural disasters for several
hundred years or more. - Second-growth forest A stand of trees resulting
from secondary ecological succession that
develops after the trees in an area have been
removed by human activities such as clear-cutting
for timber or cropland or by natural forces such
as fire, hurricanes, or volcanic eruption.
4Forests vary in their age, make-up, and origins
- A tree plantation (tree farm, commercial forest),
is a managed tract with uniformly aged trees of
one or two genetically uniform species that
usually are harvested by clear-cutting as soon as
they become commercially valuable. - Forests provide important economic and ecological
services. - Forests remove CO2 from the atmosphere and store
it in organic compounds (biomass) through
photosynthesis. - Forests help to stabilize the earths temperature
and slow projected climate change.
5The short rotation cycle of cutting and regrowth
of a monoculture tree plantation
6Weak trees removed
25 yrs
Clear cut
30 yrs
15 yrs
Years of growth
Seedlings planted
5 yrs
10 yrs
Fig. 9-3a, p. 176
7Forests provide many important economic and
ecological services
8Unsustainable logging is a major threat to forest
ecosystems
- The first step in harvesting trees is to build
roads for access and timber removal, but they can
cause the following problems - Increased erosion and sediment runoff into
waterways. - Habitat fragmentation.
- Loss of biodiversity.
- Forest exposure to invasion by nonnative pests,
diseases, and wildlife species.
9Unsustainable logging is a major threat to forest
ecosystems
- Methods of harvesting trees
- Selective cutting.
- Clear-cut.
- Strip cutting.
10Three major tree harvesting methods
11(a) Selective cutting
Clear stream
Fig. 9-6a, p. 179
12(b) Clear-cutting
Muddy stream
Fig. 9-6b, p. 179
13(c) Strip cutting
Cut 1 year ago
Uncut
Dirt road
Cut 310 years ago
Uncut
Clear stream
Fig. 9-6c, p. 179
14Aerial view showing clear-cut logging, Washington
state
15Fire can threaten or benefit forest ecosystems
- Surface fires usually burn only undergrowth and
leaf litter on the forest floor. - Kills seedlings and small trees but spares most
mature trees and allows most wild animals to
escape. - Burns away flammable ground material and may help
to prevent more destructive fires. - Frees valuable mineral nutrients tied up in
slowly decomposing litter and undergrowth.
16Fire can threaten or benefit forest ecosystems
- Releases seeds from the cones of lodgepole pines.
- Stimulates the germination of certain tree seeds
(e.g. giant sequoia and jack pine). - Helps to control tree diseases and insects.
- Crown fires are extremely hot fires that leap
from treetops, burning whole trees. - Can destroy most vegetation, kill wildlife,
increase soil erosion, and burn or damage human
structures in their paths.
17Surface fires and crown fires
18Almost half of the worlds forests have been cut
down
- Deforestation is the temporary or permanent
removal of large expanses of forest for
agriculture, settlements, or other uses. - Human activities have reduced the earths
original forest cover by about 46, with most of
this loss occurring in the last 60 years. - If current deforestation rates continue, about
40 of the worlds remaining intact forests will
have been logged or converted to other uses
within two decades, if not sooner.
19Almost half of the worlds forests have been cut
down
- Clearing large areas of forests, especially
old-growth forests, has important short-term
economic benefits, but it also has a number of
harmful environmental effects. - The net total forest cover in several countries
changed very little or even increased between
2000 and 2007. Some due to natural reforestation
by secondary ecological succession on cleared
forest areas and abandoned croplands, or the
spread of tree plantations. - Concern about the growing amount of land occupied
by commercial tree plantations, because
replacement of old-growth forests by these
biologically simplified tree farms represents a
loss of biodiversity, and possibly of stability,
in some forest ecosystems.
20Harmful effects of deforestation
21CASE STUDY Many Cleared Forests in the United
States Have Grown Back
- Forests that cover about 30 of the U.S. land
area provide habitats for more than 80 of the
countrys wildlife species and supply about
two-thirds of the nations surface water. - Today, forests in the U.S. cover more area than
they did in 1920, primarily due to secondary
succession. - Every year, more wood is grown in the U.S. than
is cut and the total area planted with trees
increases. - Protected forests make up about 40.
- Since the mid-1960s, an increasing area of the
nations remaining old-growth and fairly diverse
second-growth forests has been cut down and
replaced with biologically simplified tree
plantations.
22Forest cover in the U.S.
23Tropical forests are disappearing rapidly
- Tropical forests cover about 6 of the earths
land area. - At least half of the worlds known species of
terrestrial plants and animals live in tropical
forests. - Brazil has more than 30 of the worlds remaining
tropical rain forest in its vast Amazon basin. - At the current rate of global deforestation, 50
of the worlds remaining old-growth tropical
forests will be gone or severely degraded by the
end of this century.
24Causes of tropical deforestation are varied and
complex
- There are a number of interconnected underlying
and direct causes. - Pressures from population growth and poverty,
push subsistence farmers and the landless poor
into tropical forests, where they try to grow
enough food to survive. - Government subsidies can accelerate the direct
causes such as logging and ranching by reducing
the costs of timber harvesting, cattle grazing,
and the creation of vast plantations of crops
such as soybeans.
25Causes of tropical deforestation are varied and
complex
- Tropical forests in the Amazon and other South
American countries are cleared/burned for cattle
grazing and large soybean plantations. - In Southeast Asia, tropical forests are being
replaced with vast plantations of oil palm, whose
oil is used in cooking, cosmetics, and biodiesel
fuel for motor vehicles. - In Africa, people struggle to survive by clearing
plots for small-scale farming and by harvesting
wood for fuel, which is causing deforestation on
that continent.
26Major underlying and direct causes of the
destruction and degradation of tropical forests
27How should we manage and sustain forests?
28We can manage forests more sustainably
- Certification of sustainably grown timber and of
sustainably produced forest products can help
consumers. - Removing government subsidies and tax breaks that
encourage deforestation would also help.
29Ways to grow and harvest trees more sustainably
30We can improve the management of forest fires
- In the United States, the Smokey Bear educational
campaign has - prevented countless forest fires, saved many
lives and prevented billions of dollars in loss
of trees, wildlife, and human structures. - convinced the public that all forest fires are
bad and should be prevented or put out. - Trying to prevent all forest fires can make
matters worse by increasing the likelihood of
destructive crown fires due to the accumulation
of highly flammable underbrush and smaller trees
in some forests.
31We can improve the management of forest fires
- Strategies for reducing fire-related harm
- Prescribed burns are small, contained surface
fires to remove flammable small trees and
underbrush in the highest-risk forest areas. - Allow some fires on public lands to burn, thereby
removing flammable underbrush and smaller trees,
as long as the fires do not threaten human
structures and life. Protect houses/buildings in
fire-prone areas by thinning a zone of about 60
meters (200 feet) around them and eliminating the
use of flammable building materials such as
wooden shingles. - Thin fire-prone areas by clearing small
fire-prone trees and underbrush under careful
environmental controls.
32We can reduce the demand for harvested trees
- Reduce inefficient use of construction materials,
excess packaging, overuse of junk mail,
inadequate paper recycling, and failure to reuse
or find substitutes for wooden shipping
containers. - Paper can be made from fiber that does not come
from trees.
33Ways to reduce tropical deforestation
- Debt-for-nature swap can make it financially
attractive for countries to protect their
tropical forests. - Conservation concessions occur when governments
or private conservation organizations pay nations
for agreeing to preserve their natural resources.
34Ways to reduce tropical deforestation
- Consumers can reduce the demand for products that
are supplied through illegal and unsustainable
logging in tropical forests. - For building projects, use recycled waste lumber
or wood alternatives, such as recycled plastic
building materials and bamboo. - Reduce the use of throwaway paper products and
replace them with reusable plates, cups, and
cloth napkins and handkerchiefs. - Individuals can plant trees.
35Ways to protect tropical forests and use them
more sustainably
36How should we manage and sustain grasslands?
37Some rangelands are overgrazed
- Grasslands provide many important ecological
services, including soil formation, erosion
control, nutrient cycling, storage of atmospheric
carbon dioxide in biomass, and maintenance of
biodiversity. - Rangelands are unfenced grasslands in temperate
and tropical climates that supply forage, or
vegetation, for grazing (grass-eating) and
browsing (shrub-eating) animals.
38Some rangelands are overgrazed
- Livestock also graze in pastures, which are
managed grasslands or enclosed meadows usually
planted with domesticated grasses or other
forage. - Overgrazing occurs when too many animals graze
for too long and exceed the carrying capacity of
a rangeland area. - Limited data from surveys in various countries
indicate that overgrazing by livestock has caused
a loss in productivity in as much as 20 of the
worlds rangeland.
39Left of fence overgrazed landRight lightly
grazed land
40We can manage rangelands more sustainably
- Control the number of grazing animals and the
duration of their grazing in a given area so the
carrying capacity of the area is not exceeded. - Rotational grazing confine cattle to one area
via portable fencing for a short time (12 days)
and then moved. - Provide supplemental feed at selected sites and
strategically locate water holes and tanks and
salt blocks to reduce overgrazing. - Suppress the growth of unwanted invader plants by
use of herbicides, mechanical removal, or
controlled burning or use controlled, short-term
trampling by large numbers of livestock.
41Restoration via secondary ecological succession
42How should we manage and sustain parks and nature
reserves?
43National parks face many environmental threats
- More than 1,100 major national parks are located
in more than 120 countries. - Most too small to sustain many large animal
species. - Many parks suffer from invasions by nonnative
species that compete with and reduce the
populations of native species. - Some parks are so popular that large numbers of
visitors are degrading the natural features that
make them attractive. - Parks in less-developed countries have the
greatest biodiversity of all parks, but only
about 1 of these parklands are protected.
44CASE STUDY Stresses on U.S. Public Parks
- The U.S. national park system, established in
1912, includes 58 major national parks, along
with 335 monuments and historic sites. States,
counties, and cities also operate public parks. - Popularity is one of the biggest problems. Noisy
and polluting vehicles degrade the aesthetic
experience for many visitors, destroy or damage
fragile vegetation, and disturb wildlife. - Many suffer damage from the migration or
deliberate introduction of nonnative species. - Native speciessome of them threatened or
endangeredare killed or removed illegally.
45Nature reserves occupy only a small part of the
earths land
- As of 2010, less than 13 of the earths land
area was strictly or partially protected in
nature reserves, parks, wildlife refuges,
wilderness, and other areas. - No more than 5 of the earths land is strictly
protected from potentially harmful human
activities. - Conservation biologists call for full protection
of at least 20 of the earths land area in a
global system of biodiversity. - Developers and resource extractors oppose
protection and contend that these areas might
contain valuable resources that would add to
current economic growth.
46Nature reserves occupy only a small part of the
earths land
- Ecologists and conservation biologists view
protected areas as islands of biodiversity and
natural capital that help to sustain all life and
economies and serve as centers of evolution. - The buffer zone concept strictly protects an
inner core of a reserve and establishes buffer
zones in which local people can extract resources
sustainably without harming the inner core. - By 2010, the United Nations had used this
principle to create a global network of 553
biosphere reserves in 109 countries.
47CASE STUDY Costa RicaA Global Conservation
Leader
- Tropical forests once completely covered Costa
Rica, but between 1963 and 1983 much of the
countrys forests were cleared to graze cattle. - Costa Rica is a superpower of biodiversity, with
an estimated 500,000 plant and animal species. - Costa Rica now has a system of nature reserves
and national parks that, by 2010, included about
a quarter of its land. - Costa Rica now devotes a larger proportion of its
land to biodiversity conservation than does any
other country
48CASE STUDY Costa RicaA Global Conservation
Leader
- The countrys largest source of income is its
1-billion-a-year tourism industry, almost
two-thirds of which involves ecotourism. - To reduce deforestation, the government has cut
subsidies for converting forest to rangeland. - The government pays landowners to maintain or
restore tree cover. - Between 2007 and 2008, the government planted
nearly 14 million trees. - Went from having one of the worlds highest
deforestation rates to having one of the lowest.
49Costa Ricas eight megareserves
50Nicaragua
Caribbean Sea
Costa Rica
Panama
Pacific Ocean
National parkland
Buffer zone
Fig. 9-20, p. 191
51Protecting wilderness is an important way to
preserve biodiversity
- One way to protect undeveloped lands is to set
them aside as wilderness, land officially
designated as an area where natural communities
have not been seriously disturbed by humans and
where human activities are limited by law. - Some critics oppose protecting large areas for
their scenic and recreational value for a
relatively small number of people. - Conservation biologists support protecting
wilderness in order to preserve biodiversity and
as centers for evolution.
52CASE STUDY Controversy over Wilderness
Protection in the United States
- Conservationists have been trying to save wild
areas from development since 1900. - The Wilderness Act (1964) allowed the government
to protect undeveloped tracts of public land from
development as part of the National Wilderness
Preservation System. - Only about 2 of the land area of the lower 48
states is protected, most of it in the West.
53What is the ecosystem approach to sustaining
biodiversity?
54Here are four ways to protect ecosystems
- Most biologists and wildlife conservationists
believe that the best way to keep from hastening
the extinction of wild species through human
activities is the ecosystems approach, which
protects threatened habitats and ecosystem
services.
55Here are four ways to protect ecosystems
- Four-point plan of the ecosystems approach
- Map the worlds terrestrial and aquatic
ecosystems and create an inventory of the species
contained in each of them and the ecosystem
services they provide. - Locate and protect the most endangered ecosystems
and species, with emphasis on protecting plant
biodiversity and ecosystem services. - Seek to restore as many degraded ecosystems as
possible.
56Protecting global biodiversity hotspots is an
urgent priority
- Some biodiversity scientists urge adoption of an
emergency action strategy to identify and quickly
protect biodiversity hotspots, areas especially
rich in plant species that are found nowhere else
and are in great danger of extinction . - These hotspots cover only a little more than 2
of the earths land surface, they contain an
estimated 50 of the worlds flowering plant
species and 42 of all terrestrial species. - These hotspots are home for a large majority of
the worlds endangered or critically endangered
species, and one-fifth of the worlds population.
57Biodiversity hotspots
58We can rehabilitate and restore ecosystems that
we have damaged
- Almost every natural place on the earth has been
affected or degraded to some degree by human
activities. - We can at least partially reverse much of this
harm through ecological restoration the process
of repairing damage caused by humans to the
biodiversity and dynamics of natural ecosystems. - Examples of restoration include
- replanting forests
59We can rehabilitate and restore ecosystems that
we have damaged
- restoring grasslands
- restoring coral reefs
- restoring wetlands and stream banks
- reintroducing native species
- removing invasive species
- freeing river flows by removing dams.
60We can rehabilitate and restore ecosystems that
we have damaged
- Four steps to speed up repair operations include
the following - Restoration.
- Rehabilitation.
- Replacement.
- Creating artificial ecosystems.
61We can rehabilitate and restore ecosystems that
we have damaged
- Researchers have suggested a science-based,
four-step strategy for carrying out most forms of
ecological restoration and rehabilitation - Identify the causes of the degradation.
- Stop the abuse by eliminating or sharply reducing
these factors. - If necessary, reintroduce key species to help
restore natural ecological processes. - Protect the area from further degradation and
allow secondary ecological succession to occur.
62We can share areas we dominate with other species
- Reconciliation ecology is the science that
focuses on inventing, establishing, and
maintaining new habitats to conserve species
diversity in places where people live, work, or
play. - Examples include
- Protecting local wildlife and ecosystems can
provide economic resources for their communities
by encouraging sustainable forms of ecotourism.
63We can share areas we dominate with other species
- Protecting vital insect pollinators such as
native butterflies and bees by reducing the use
of pesticides, planting flowering plants as a
source of food for pollinating insect species,
and building structures which serve as hives for
pollinating bees. - Protecting bluebirds within human-dominated
habitats where most of the bluebirds nesting
trees have been cut down by using nesting boxes
and keeping house cats away from nesting
bluebirds.
64Ways you can help sustain terrestrial biodiversity
65How can we help to sustain aquatic biodiversity?
66Human activities are destroying and degrading
aquatic biodiversity
- Human activities have destroyed or degraded a
large portion of the worlds coastal wetlands,
coral reefs, mangroves, and ocean bottom, and
disrupted many of the worlds freshwater
ecosystems. - Rising sea levels are likely to destroy many
coral reefs and flood some low-lying islands
along with their protective coastal mangrove
forests. - Loss and degradation of many sea-bottom habitats
caused by dredging operations and trawler fishing
boats.
67Human activities are destroying and degrading
aquatic biodiversity
- In freshwater aquatic zones, dam building and
excessive water withdrawal from rivers for
irrigation and urban water supplies destroy
aquatic habitats, degrade water flows, and
disrupt freshwater biodiversity. - The deliberate or accidental introduction of
hundreds of harmful invasive species threatens
aquatic biodiversity. - Thirty-four percent of the worlds known marine
fish species and 71 of the worlds freshwater
fish species face premature extinction.
68Before and after a trawler net
69Overfishing gone fishing fish gone
- A fishery is a concentration of a particular wild
aquatic species suitable for commercial
harvesting in a given ocean area or inland body
of water. - The fishprint is defined as the area of ocean
needed to sustain the consumption of an average
person, a nation, or the world. - Fifty-two percent of the worlds fisheries are
fully exploited, 20 are moderately
overexploited, and 28 are overexploited or
depleted.
70Overfishing gone fishing fish gone
- Overharvesting has led to the collapse of some of
the worlds major fisheries. - When overharvesting causes larger predatory
species to dwindle, rapidly reproducing invasive
species can more easily take over and disrupt
ocean food webs.
71The collapse of Canadas 500-year-old Atlantic
cod fishery
72900,000
800,000
700,000
600,000
500,000
Fish landings (tons)
400,000
1992
300,000
200,000
100,000
0
1920
1940
1960
1980
2000
1900
Year
Fig. 9-25, p. 197
73CASE STUDY Industrial Fish Harvesting Methods
- Industrial fishing fleets dominate the worlds
marine fishing industry, using global satellite
positioning equipment, sonar fish-finding
devices, huge nets and long fishing lines,
spotter planes, and gigantic refrigerated factory
ships that can process and freeze their catches. - Trawler fishing is used to catch fish and
shellfish by dragging a funnel-shaped net held
open at the neck along the ocean bottom. - Purse-seine fishing, is used to catch
surface-dwelling fish by using a spotter plane to
locate a school the fishing vessel then encloses
it with a large net called a purse seine.
74CASE STUDY Industrial Fish Harvesting Methods
- Longlining involves lines up to 130 kilometers
(80 miles) long, hung with thousands of baited
hooks to catch open-ocean fish species or bottom
fishes. - Drift-net fishing catches fish with huge drifting
nets that can hang as deep as 15 meters (50 feet)
below the surface and extend to 64 kilometers (40
miles) long. - Drift-nets can trap and kill large quantities of
unwanted fish, called bycatch, along with marine
mammals, sea turtles, and seabirds. - Almost one-third of the worlds annual fish catch
by weight consists of bycatch species, which are
mostly thrown overboard dead or dying.
75Major commercial fishing methods
76Fish farming in cage
Trawler fishing
Spotter airplane
Purse-seine fishing
Sonar
Drift-net fishing
Long line fishing
Float
Buoy
lines with hooks
Deep sea aquaculture cage
Fish caught by gills
Fig. 9-26, p. 198
77We can protect and sustain marine biodiversity
- Protecting marine biodiversity is difficult for
several reasons. - The human ecological footprint and fishprint are
expanding so rapidly into aquatic areas that it
is difficult to monitor the impacts. - Much of the damage to the oceans and other bodies
of water is not visible to most people.
78We can protect and sustain marine biodiversity
- Many people incorrectly view the seas as an
inexhaustible resource that can absorb an almost
infinite amount of waste and pollution and still
produce all the seafood we want. - Most of the worlds ocean area lies outside the
legal jurisdiction of any country and is thus an
open-access resource and subject to
overexploitation.
79We can protect and sustain marine biodiversity
- Several ways to protect and sustain marine
biodiversity - Protect endangered and threatened aquatic
species. - Establish protected marine sanctuaries.
- Protect whole marine ecosystems within a global
network of fully protected marine reserves.
80Ways to manage fisheries more sustainably and
protect marine biodiversity
81Taking an Ecosystem Approach to Sustaining
Aquatic Biodiversity
- Strategies for applying the ecosystem approach to
aquatic biodiversity include - Complete the mapping of the worlds aquatic
biodiversity, identifying and locating as many
plant and animal species as possible. - Identify and preserve the worlds aquatic
biodiversity hotspots and areas where
deteriorating ecosystem services threaten people
and other forms of life.
82Taking an Ecosystem Approach to Sustaining
Aquatic Biodiversity
- Create large and fully protected marine reserves
to allow damaged marine ecosystems to recover and
to allow fish stocks to be replenished. - Protect and restore the worlds lakes and river
systems (the most threatened ecosystems of all). - Initiate worldwide ecological restoration
projects in systems such as coral reefs and
inland and coastal wetlands. - Find ways to raise the incomes of people who live
in or near protected lands and waters so that
they can become partners in the protection and
sustainable use of ecosystems.
83Taking an Ecosystem Approach to Sustaining
Aquatic Biodiversity
- The harmful effects of human activities on
aquatic biodiversity and ecosystem services could
be reversed over the next 2 decades if an
ecosystem approach is implemented, at a cost one
of penny per cup of coffee consumed in the world
each year.
84Three big ideas
- The economic values of the important ecological
services provided by the worlds ecosystems are
far greater than the value of raw materials
obtained from those systems. - We can sustain terrestrial biodiversity by
protecting severely threatened areas, protecting
remaining undisturbed areas, restoring damaged
ecosystems, and sharing with other species much
of the land we dominate. - We can sustain aquatic biodiversity by
establishing protected sanctuaries, managing
coastal development, reducing water pollution,
and preventing overfishing.