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Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T' Wright

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Puffin Project: Seabird Restoration. Project of the Audubon Society. The Value of Wild ... Photo by C. E. Adams. Human Population Growth and Species Extinctions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T' Wright


1
Environmental Science Toward a Sustainable
Future Richard T. Wright
Chapter 10
  • Wild Species and Biodiversity
  • PPT by Clark E. Adams

2
Wild Species and Biodiversity
  • The value of wild species
  • Saving wild species
  • Biodiversity and its decline
  • Protecting Biodiversity

3
Appreciating the Worth of Diversity
  • The worth () of plant and animal diversity in
    terms of goods and services
  • Factors that contribute to a reduction in plant
    and animal diversity
  • Understanding the costs of losing plant and
    animal diversity
  • Programs to protect biodiversity

4
Puffin Project Seabird Restoration Project of
the Audubon Society
5
The Value of Wild Species
  • Biological wealth
  • Two kinds of value
  • Sources for agriculture, forestry, aquaculture,
    and animal husbandry
  • Sources for medicine
  • Recreational, aesthetic, and scientific value
  • Value for their own sake

6
Biological Wealth 38 Trillion/Year
  • Gas, climate, and water regulation
  • Water supply
  • Erosion control
  • Soil formation
  • Pollination

7
Biological Wealth 38 Trillion/Year
  • Biological control
  • Food production
  • Recreation
  • Raw materials
  • Nutrient cycling
  • Waste treatment

8
Two Kinds of Value
  • Instrumental beneficial to humans
  • Sources for agriculture, forestry, aquaculture,
    and animal husbandry
  • Recreational, aesthetic, and scientific value
  • Sources of medicine
  • Intrinsic value for its own sake

9
Source for Agriculture Wild or Cultivated?
  • Highly adaptable to changing environments
  • Have numerous traits for resistance
  • Lack genetic vigor

10
Source for Agriculture Wild or Cultivated?
  • High degree of genetic diversity
  • Represents the genetic bank
  • Need highly controlled environmental conditions

11
Sources for Medicine Vincristine
12
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13
Sources of Medicine Table 10-1
  • Vincristine from rosy periwinkle cures leukemia.
  • Capoten from the venom of the Brazilian viper
    controls high blood pressure.
  • Taxol from the bark of the pacific yew used to
    treat ovarian, breast, and small-cell cancers.

14
Recreational, Aesthetic, and Scientific Value
  • Ecotourism largest foreign exchange-generating
    enterprise in many developing countries
  • 104 billion spent on wildlife-related recreation
  • 31 billion spent to observe, feed, or photograph
    wildlife

15
Recreational, Aesthetic, and Scientific Value
16
Value for Their Own Sake
  • Spiritual giving divine recognition to selected
    species
  • Religious association between wild things and a
    creator
  • Cultural animal rights, American Indians

17
Saving Wild Species
  • Game animals in the United States
  • Acts protecting endangered species

18
Past Wildlife Management Problems
  • Restoring the numbers of many game animals, e.g.,
    deer, elk, turkey
  • Passing laws to control the collection and
    commercial exploitation of wildlife
  • Poaching and overhunting

19
Contemporary Wildlife Management Problems
  • Road-killed animals
  • Population explosion of urban wildlife
  • Lack of natural predators
  • Wildlife as vectors for certain diseases
  • Pet predation by coyotes
  • Changed societal attitudes towards animals

20
Acts Protecting Endangered Species
  • Lacey Act forbids interstate commerce of
    illegally killed wildlife
  • Endangered Species Act (ESA) protects endangered
    and threatened species (Table 10-4)
  • Total endangered U.S. species 987 (388 animals,
    599 plants)
  • Threatened U.S. species 276 (129 animals, 147
    plants)

21
Strengths or Weaknesses of Endangered Species Act?
  • The need for official recognition
  • Control over commercial exploitation of
    endangered species
  • Government controls on development in critical
    habitats
  • Recovery programs
  • Habitat conservation plan (HCP)

22
Case Histories
  • Peregrine falcon
  • Whooping crane
  • Spotted owl
  • Klamath river and coho salmon

23
Biodiversity and Its Decline
  • The decline in biodiversity
  • Reasons for the decline
  • Consequences of losing biodiversity

24
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25
The Status of U.S. Species
26
Causes of Animal Extinctions
27
Reasons for Biodiversity Decline
  • Habitat alterations
  • Conversions
  • Fragmentation
  • Simplification
  • Human population growth
  • Pollution (Fig. 10-14)

28
Reasons for Biodiversity Decline
  • Introduction of exotic species, e.g., brown tree
    snake in Guam
  • Overuse combination of greed, ignorance, and
    desperation

29
Habitat Alterations
Photo by C. E. Adams
30
Human Population Growth and Species Extinctions
31
Pollution Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
  • March 24, 1989
  • 11 million gallons of crude oil spilled into
    Prince William Sound

Oil slick
32
Exotic Species Brazilian Pepper Bush
33
Overuse
  • Harvest of 50 million songbirds for food

34
Overuse
  • Trafficking in wildlife and products derived from
    wild species 10 billion/year
  • 90 decline in rhinos
  • 1.6 tons of tiger bones 340 tigers
  • Parrot smuggling 40 of 330 species face
    extinction

35
Consequences of Losing Biodiversity The Plane
Analogy
  • The whole plane is an ecosystem.
  • There are many different parts (species) in the
    jet plane ecosystem.
  • How does removal of one or more species affect
    ecosystem structure or function?

36
Protecting Biodiversity
  • International developments
  • Stewardship concerns

37
International Steps to Protect Biodiversity
  • Red List of Threatened Species
  • 11,167 species of plants and animals
  • Convention on trade in endangered species (CITES)
  • Focuses on trade in wildlife and wildlife parts
  • Convention of Biological Diversity (CBD)

38
International Steps to Protect Biodiversity
  • Convention of Biological Diversity (CBD)
  • Stepping up war on invasive species
  • Access to genetic resources
  • Stem tide of deforestations
  • Formulating a strategic plan through 2010

39
International Steps to Protect Biodiversity
  • Convention on biological diversity
  • Focuses on conserving biological diversity
    worldwide
  • Does not yet have the support of the United
    States

40
Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund
  • Sponsors World Bank, Conservation International,
    and the Global Environment Facility
  • Fund 150 million for developing countries
  • Protect biodiversity hotspots

41
Biodiversity Hotspots
60 of the biodiversity is located on just 1.4
of the Earths land surface.
42
Stewardship Concerns
  • Managing and protecting something you DO NOT own.
    Involves
  • Wisdom
  • Values

43
The Wisdom of Stewardship
  • Reforming policies that lead to declines in
    biodiversity
  • Addressing the needs of people whose livelihood
    is derived from exploiting wild species

44
The Wisdom of Stewardship
  • Practicing conservation at the landscape level
  • Promoting more research on biodiversity

45
The Values of Stewardship
  • Manage or mine the resource?
  • Human perceptions of their relationships to the
    natural world
  • Deep ecology we are part of the Earth and not
    separate from it
  • Religious faiths

46
End of Chapter 10
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