Title: Chapter 6 Sustaining Biodiversity: The Ecosystem Approach
1Chapter 6Sustaining Biodiversity The
Ecosystem Approach
26-1 What Are the Major Threats to Forest
Ecosystems?
- Concept 6-1 Unsustainable cutting and burning of
forests, especially in tropical areas, is a
potentially catastrophic problem because of the
vital ecological services at risk and the growing
contribution to global warming.
3Forests Vary in Their Make-Up, Age, and Origins
- Old-growth or primary forest
- 36 of worlds forests
- Second-growth forest
- 60 of worlds forests
- Tree plantation, tree farm or commercial forest
- 4 of worlds forests
- May supply most of the industrial wood in the
future
4Rotation Cycle of Cutting and Regrowth of a
Monoculture Tree Plantation
Fig. 6-1, p. 111
5Weak trees removed
25 yrs
Clear cut
30 yrs
15 yrs
Years of growth
Seedlings planted
5 yrs
10 yrs
Fig. 6-1, p. 114
6Forests Provide Important Economic and
Ecological Services (1)
- Support energy flow and chemical cycling
- Reduce soil erosion
- Absorb and release water
- Purify water and air
- Influence local and regional climate
- Store atmospheric carbon
- Habitats
7Forests Provide Important Economic and
Ecological Services (2)
- Wood for fuel
- Lumber
- Pulp to make paper
- Mining
- Livestock grazing
- Recreation
- Employment
8Natural Capital Major Ecological and Economic
Services Provided by Forests
Fig. 6-2, p. 111
9Unsustainable Logging is a Major Threat to Forest
Ecosystems (1)
- Increased erosion
- Sediment runoff into waterways
- Habitat fragmentation
- Loss of biodiversity
10Unsustainable Logging is a Major Threat to Forest
Ecosystems (2)
- Invasion by
- Nonnative pests
- Disease
- Wildlife species
- Major tree harvesting methods
- Selective cutting
- Clear-cutting
- Strip cutting
11Natural Capital Degradation Building Roads into
Previously Inaccessible Forests
Fig. 6-3, p. 112
12Cleared plots for grazing
Highway
New highway
Cleared plots for agriculture
Old growth
Fig. 6-3, p. 112
13Fig. 6-3a, p. 112
14Fig. 6-3b, p. 112
15Major Tree Harvesting Methods
Fig. 6-4, p. 113
16Fig. 6-4a, p. 113
17(a) Selective cutting
Clear stream
Fig. 6-4a, p. 113
18Fig. 6-4b, p. 113
19(b) Clear-cutting
Muddy stream
Fig. 6-4b, p. 113
20Fig. 6-4c, p. 113
21(c) Strip cutting
Uncut
Cut 1 year ago
Dirt road
Cut 310 years ago
Uncut
Clear stream
Fig. 6-4c, p. 113
22Stepped Art
Fig. 6-4, p. 113
23We Have Cut Down Almost Half of the Worlds
Forests
- Deforestation
- Tropical forests
- Especially in Latin America, Indonesia, and
Africa - Boreal forests
- Especially in Alaska, Canada, Scandinavia, and
Russia
24Case Study Many Cleared Forests in the United
States Have Grown Back
- Forests of the eastern United States decimated
between 1620 and 1920 - Grown back naturally through secondary ecological
succession in the eastern states - Biologically simplified tree plantations reduce
biodiversity
25Tropical Forests are Disappearing Rapidly
- Majority of loss since 1950
- Africa, Southeast Asia, South America
- 98 will be gone by 2022
- Role of deforestation in species extinction
- Secondary forest can grow back in 15-20 years
26Causes of Tropical Deforestation Are Varied and
Complex
- Population growth
- Poverty of subsistence farmers
- Ranching
- Lumber
- Plantation farms palm oil
- Begins with building of roads
- Many forests burned
- Can tilt tropical forest to tropical savanna
27Natural Capital Degradation Deforestation
Fig. 6-5, p. 113
28Major Causes of the Destruction and Degradation
of Tropical Forests
Fig. 6-6, p. 115
29NATURAL CAPITAL DEGRADATION
Major Causes of the Destruction and Degradation
of Tropical Forests
Basic Causes
Direct Causes
Not valuing ecological services
Roads
Cattle ranching
Fires
Logging
Crop and timber exports
Settler farming
Tree plantations
Government policies
Cash crops
Poverty
Population growth
Cattle ranching
Tree plantations
Logging
Cash crops
Settler farming
Fires
Roads
Fig. 6-6, p. 115
306-2 How Should We Manage and Sustain Forests?
- Concept 6-2 We can sustain forests by emphasizing
the economic value of their ecological services,
removing government subsidies that hasten their
destruction, protecting old-growth forests,
harvesting trees no faster than they are
replenished, and planting trees.
31Solutions Sustainable Forestry
Fig. 6-7, p. 116
32Individuals Matter Wangari Maathari and Kenyas
Green Belt Movement
- Green Belt Movement 1977
- Self-help group of women in Kenya
- Success of tree planting
- 50,000 members planted 40 million trees
- Women are paid for each tree that survives
- Slows soil erosion
- Shade and beauty
- Combats global warming
- Nobel Peace Prize 2004
33Governments and Individuals Can Act to Reduce
Tropical Deforestation
- Reduce fuelwood demand
- Practice small-scale sustainable agriculture and
forestry in tropical forest - Debt-for-nature swaps
- Conservation concessions
- Use gentler logging methods
- Buy certified lumber and wood products
34Solutions Sustaining Tropical Forests
Fig. 6-8, p. 117
356-3 How Should We Manage and Sustain Parks and
Natural Reserves?
- Concept 6-3 Sustaining biodiversity will require
more effective protection of existing parks and
nature reserves, as well as the protection of
much more of the earths remaining undisturbed
land area.
36National Parks Face Many Environmental Threats
- Worldwide 1100 major national parks
- Parks in developing countries
- Greatest biodiversity
- 1 protected against
- Illegal animal poaching
- Illegal logging and mining
37Case Study Stresses on U.S. Public Parks (1)
- 58 Major national parks in the U.S.
- Biggest problem may be popularity
- Noise
- Congestion
- Pollution
- Damage or destruction to vegetation and wildlife
38Case Study Stresses on U.S. Public Parks (2)
- Damage from nonnative species
- Boars and mountain goats
- Introduced plants, insects, worms
- Native species sometimes killed or removed
- Threatened islands of biodiversity
- Air pollution
- Need billions in trail and infrastructure repairs
39Solutions National Parks
Fig. 6-9, p. 119
40Science Focus Reintroducing the Gray Wolf to
Yellowstone National Park
- Keystone species
- 1995 reintroduced 2009 116 wolves in park
- Prey on elk and push them to a higher elevation
- Regrowth of aspen, cottonwoods, and willows
- More beaver dams, more wetlands, more aspens
- Reduced the number of coyotes
- Fewer attacks on cattle
- More smaller mammals
41Nature Reserves Occupy Only a Small Part of the
Earths Land
- Currently less than 13 is protected
- Conservationists goal protect 20
- Cooperation between government and private groups
and concerned individuals - Nature Conservancy
- Land trust groups
42Solutions A Model Biosphere Reserve
Fig. 6-10, p. 120
43Biosphere Reserve
Core area
Research station
Visitor education center
Buffer zone 1
Human settlements
Buffer zone 2
Fig. 6-10, p. 120
44Case Study Costa RicaA Global Conservation
Leader
- 19631983 cleared much of the forest
- 19862006 forests grew from 26 to 51
- Goal net carbon dioxide emissions to zero by
2021 - ¼ of land in nature reserves and natural parks
global leader - Earns 1 billion per year in tourism
45Solutions Costa Rica Parks and Reserves8
Megareserves
46Protecting Wilderness Is an Important Way to
Preserve Biodiversity
- Wilderness
- Land officially designated as having no serious
disturbance from human activities - Wilderness Act of 1964
- Controversial
47Case Study Controversy over Wilderness
Protection in the United States
- Wilderness Act of 1964
- Protect undeveloped lands
- 2 of lower 48 protected, mostly in West
- 10-fold increase from 1970 to 2010
- 2009
- 2 million more acres get wilderness protection
- 50 increase in length of wild and scenic rivers
486-4 What is the Ecosystem Approach to Sustaining
Biodiversity?
- Concept 6-4 We can help sustain biodiversity by
identifying and protecting severely threatened
areas (biodiversity hotspots), restoring damaged
ecosystems, and sharing as much of the earths
land as possible with other species.
49We Can Use a Four-Point Strategy to Protect
Ecosystems
- Map global ecosystems identify species
- Locate and protect most endangered ecosystems and
species - Restore degraded ecosystems
- Development must be biodiversity-friendly
- Are new laws needed?
50Protecting Global Biodiversity Hot Spots Is an
Urgent Priority
- 34 biodiversity hot spots rich in plant species
- 2 of earths surface, but 50 of flowering plant
species and 42 of terrestrial vertebrates - 1.2 billion people
51Endangered Natural Capital 34 Biodiversity
Hotspots
Fig. 6-12, p. 123
52We Can Rehabilitate and Restore Ecosystems That
We Have Damaged (1)
- Study how natural ecosystems recover
- Restoration
- Rehabilitation
- Replacement
- Creating artificial ecosystems
53We Can Rehabilitate and Restore Ecosystems That
We Have Damaged (2)
- How to carry out most forms of ecological
restoration and rehabilitation - Identify what caused the degradation
- Stop the abuse
- Reintroduce species, if possible
- Protect from further degradation
54Case Study A Biodiversity Hot Spot in East
Africa
- Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania, Africa
- Highest concentration of endangered species on
earth - Threatened due to
- Killing of forests by farmers and loggers
- Hunting
- Fires
55We Can Share Areas We Dominate With Other Species
- Reconciliation ecology
- Invent and maintain habitats for species
diversity where people live, work, and play - Community-based conservation
- Belize and the black howler monkeys
- Protect vital insect pollinators
56Case Study The Blackfoot ChallengeReconciliation
Ecology in Action
- 1970s Blackfoot River Valley in Montana
threatened by - Poor mining, logging, and grazing practices
- Water and air pollution
- Unsustainable commercial and residential
development - Community meetings led to
- Weed-pulling parties
- Nesting structures for waterfowl
- Developed sustainable grazing systems
57What Can You Do? Sustaining Terrestrial
Biodiversity
Fig. 6-13, p. 125
58Concept 6-5 How Can We Protect and Sustain Marine
Biodiversity?
- Concept 6-5 We can help to sustain marine
biodiversity by using laws and economic
incentives to protect species, setting aside
marine reserves to protect ecosystems, and using
community-based integrated coastal management.
59We Have Much to Learn about Aquatic Biodiversity
(1)
- Greatest marine biodiversity
- Coral reefs
- Estuaries
- Deep-ocean floor
- Biodiversity is higher
- Near the coast than in the open sea
- In the bottom region of the ocean than the
surface region
60We Have Much to Learn about Aquatic Biodiversity
(2)
- Threats
- Pressure on all aquatic ecosystems
- Dredging by trawler boats
- Coral reefs threatened by pollution, growing
acidity, warmer waters - Introduction of invasive species
- Human population growth
- Climate change
- Overfishing
61There Are Ways to Protect and Sustain Marine
Biodiversity (1)
- Why is it hard to protect marine biodiversity?
- Human ecological footprint and fishprint are
expanding - Much of the damage in the ocean is not visible
- The oceans are incorrectly viewed as an
inexhaustible resource - Most of the ocean lies outside the legal
jurisdiction of any country
62There Are Ways to Protect and Sustain Marine
Biodiversity (2)
- 1975 Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species - 1979 Global Treaty on Migratory Species
- U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972
- U.S. Endangered Species Act of 1973
- U.S. Whale Conservation and Protection Act of
1976 - 1995 International Convention on Biological
Diversity
63There Are Ways to Protect and Sustain Marine
Biodiversity (3)
- Marine reserves
- Off-limits to destructive human activities
- Fish populations double
- Fish size grows
- Reproduction triples
- Species diversity increase by almost one-fourth
64There Are Ways to Protect and Sustain Marine
Biodiversity ( 4 )
- Economic incentives for protection
- Ecotourism protects turtles and whales
- Integrated coastal management
- Community-based group to prevent further
degradation of the ocean
65Solutions Managing Fisheries
Fig. 6-14, p. 127
66Freshwater Ecosystems Are under Major Threats
- 40 of worlds rivers are dammed
- Many freshwater wetlands destroyed
- Invasive species
- Threatened species
- Overfishing
- Human population pressures
67Case Study Can the Great Lakes Survive Repeated
Invasions by Alien Species?
- Collectively, worlds largest body of freshwater
- Invaded by at least 162 nonnative species
- Sea lamprey
- Zebra mussel
- Asian carp
68We Can Protect Freshwater Ecosystems by
Protecting Watersheds
- Freshwater ecosystems protected through
- Laws
- Economic incentives
- Restoration efforts
- Wild rivers and scenic rivers
- 1968 National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act
69 What Should Be Our Priorities?
- Concept 6-7 We can help to sustain the worlds
biodiversity by mapping it, protecting
biodiversity hotspots, creating large terrestrial
and aquatic reserves, and carrying out ecological
restoration of degraded terrestrial and aquatic
systems.
70We Need to Establish Priorities for Protecting
Biodiversity
- Edward O. Wilson
- Complete the mapping of the worlds terrestrial
and aquatic biodiversity - Identify and preserve hotspots and deteriorating
ecosystem services that threaten life - Keep old-growth forests intact cease their
logging - Create large, fully protected marine reserves
- Protect and restore lakes and rivers
- Ecological restoration projects
- Make conservation financially rewarding
71Three 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. - Terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems are being
severely degraded by human activities that lead
to habitat disruption and loss of biodiversity.
72Three Big Ideas
- We can help to sustain the worlds biodiversity
by mapping it, protecting biodiversity hotspots,
creating large terrestrial and aquatic reserves,
and carrying out ecological restoration of
degraded terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.