Title: What is Conservation Biology
1Chapter 1
- What is Conservation Biology?
2The beauty and genius of a work of art may be
reconceived, through its first material
expression be destroyed, a vanished harmony may
yet again inspire the composer but when the last
individual of a race of living things breathes no
more, another heave and earth must pass before
such a one can be again.
- William Beebe, 1906naturalist, oceanographer,
ornithologist, and curator of the New York
Zoological Society
3Why the concern over loss?
4Ectopistes migratorius
5Humans and their activities affect
- Other organismsHabitatsEcosystems
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7More humans result in
- more consumption.
- Net Primary Productivity (NPP)
- The energy from the sun transformed into biomass
- Biomass is the base of all food webs
- Loss of NPP caused by a variety of actions
- Food consumption
- Lumber for construction
- Clear-cutting to make way for
- Disproportionate consumption across the world
84 of the worlds population
16.7 of the worlds population
9Effects of humans everywhere
83 of land influenced by one or more human
activities agriculture, population,
urbanization, roads, night pollution
10Reason for Hope
- World pop. growth rates have slowed
- Education/job skills/economic development reduce
family size - Increased awareness of human impacts
- Efforts to reduce CO2 emissions
- Focus on using less and recycling
- Recognition that biodiversity depends on
conservation and sustainable development
11Conservation Biology
- (another reason for hope!)
12Conservation Biology
- Response of the scientific community to the loss
of biological diversity - Recent field, formalized in 1980s
- Synthetic field, combining basic scientific
pursuits with applied science
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14Is Conservation Biology new?
15ConBio as a field
- Application of theoretical/academic principles to
real world situations, in some cases bringing
about new policies.
16ConBio as a field
- Transition from utilitarian philosophy to
recognition that all parts of nature have at
least inherent value.
17ConBio as a field
- Transition from utilitarian philosophy to
recognition that all parts of nature have at
least inherent value. - OLD management of a single species for the
benefit of man - NEW stewardship of biodiversity and natural
ecosystems
18ConBio as a field
- Participation of non-biologists is critical to
success of conservation efforts
19Goal of ConBio
- to understand natural ecological systems well
enough to maintain their diversity in the face of
an exploding human population that has
fragmented, simplified, and destroyed many
ecosystems.
20 The commons
- Public lands
- Early Europe, these areas were part of the few
areas NOT owned by wealthy monarchs - Often the first areas to be exploited and
overused - This process occurs virtually everywhere
21 Exploitation of U.S. commons
- Forests and wetlands of US more pristine, rich in
resources than Europe - Intense use of these areas occurred after
colonization due to demand in Europe - Forests produced lumber for ship building,
railroad construction, and development - Wetlands used for agriculture
- Conservation efforts implemented to avoid
significant loss, destruction
22Conservation in the U.S.
- Romantic-Transcendental Conservation Ethic
- Resource Conservation Ethic
- Evolutionary-Ecological Land Ethic
23Romantic-Transcendental Conservation Ethic
24Romantic-Transcendental Conservation Ethic
- Nature has uses other than economic gain
- Quasi-religious view of woods as a temple to
commune with god - Pristine environments allow man to cleanse
himself from civilization - Preservationist approach to conservation
25Resource Conservation Ethic
- Chief of USFS, 1905-1910
- Nature natural resources
- Anthopogenic view of nature
- Motto The greatest good of the greatest number
for the longest time - Approach to conservation stressed equity
26Resource Conservation Ethic
- Developed multi-use concept
- Different uses of land/water simultaneously
- Accomplish logging, grazing, preservation,
recreation, and protection - Advocated government regulation and/or public
ownership to ensure conservation and guard
against the non-equitable free-market system - Mandate for USFS and BLM
27Evolutionary-EcologicalLand Ethic
- A Sand County Almanac
- Forester trained in the Pinchot tradition
- Ecologist and environmentalist
- Believed strict utilitarian treatment of natural
resources scientifically unsound
28Evolutionary-EcologicalLand Ethic
- Nature like a Swiss watch
- Interrelated parts and components
- Some parts directly useful to man
- Other parts serve no apparent function, but can
not be discarded - Equilibrium view of nature all parts needed to
work together in harmony
29Which ethic governs conservation biology today?
30Modern Conservation Biology
- A synthesis of ideas
- Sciences for theory and practice
- Stewardship for philosophical context
- Expanded view of ecosystems
- Large animals, soils water
- Less visible (but essential) components
- Broad partnerships in Cons Biol
- Scientists, governments, NGOs, public
31Guiding Principles of Conservation Biology
32Guiding Principles of Conservation Biology
33Evolutionary Change
- Organisms adapt in response to changes in the
environment - Genetic composition in populations changes over
time - Genetic drift, immigration, emigration, natural
selection - Ensure populations CAN change/adapt in response
to future environmental change
34Equilibrium Paradigm
- Balance of nature
- Ecological systems are in equilibrium and can
reach climax community - Assumes closed, self-regulating systems
- Makes for easy conservation biology
- Leave ecosystems undisturbed once they reach
climax community - Protect areas already stable
35Equilibrium Paradigm
- The balance of nature changes also
- Nothing stays the same forever
- Changes in
- Ecological structure
- Number of a species
- Species composition
- Evolutionary structure
- Physical or behavioral characteristics of a
species
36Dynamic Ecology
- Indefinite equilibrium, at best
- No ultimate or long-term stable state
- External processes occur
- Fires, floods, droughts, storms, earthquakes
- Some ecosystems DEPEND on external processes
- Habitat types patchily distributed, not uniform
37Jack Pine Barrens
- Critical habitat for KIWA
- Prefers Jack Pine forests 16-20 years old
- Initial management suppressed fire
- Fire removes older trees, generating new growth
38Dynamic Ecology
- Dynamic, not chaotic
- Fluid community structure
- Ecosystems are open systems, subject to change,
and interact with surroundings - Conservation efforts can not focus on areas in
isolation - Recognize spatial and temporal change
39Human Presence
- No way to protect against human influence
- Rather, account for human activities in
conservation efforts - Indigenous peoples and their culture
- Part of the landscape and ecosystem(s)
- May demonstrate models of sustainability
40Guiding Principles of Conservation Biology
41For your consideration
- Pervasive aspects of Conservation Biology and
conservation efforts
42Response to a crisis
- Crises demand quick action
- Scientists trained in the scientific method
- Which is better
- Maintain scientific credibility but risk inaction
- Advocate method of action but risk professional
reputation - Disparate pressures with similar intensities
43An inexact science
- Simple answers not always available
- Answers generally given in probabilities,
likelihoods generated from statistics - Scientific uncertainty requires safety margins
- Precautionary Principle
44Precautionary Principle
- Safety net when information is incomplete but
decisions need to be made - Avoid practices that lead to harm
- Wingspread Statement
- Lack of scientific certainty is no excuse to take
steps to minimize threats to biodiversity.
45A value-laden science
- Researchers are supposed to be free from bias,
opinion, goals, or desires - Clear goal in conservation biology and for
conservation biologists
46The goal of Conservation Biology is how to
preserve and promote biological diversity and
ecosystem integrity in the face of the expanding
and influential human population.
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