Title: Mrs. Dow Unit Four Chapter 11
1Mrs. DowUnit FourChapter 11
- Sustaining Terrestrial Biodiversity
- Managing and protecting Ecosystems
2Reintroducing Wolves to Yellowstone
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3Case Study Reintroducing Wolves to
Yellowstone
- At one time the gray wolf ranged over most of
North America - 1850-1900- an 2 million wolves were shot,
trapped and poisoned by ranchers, hunters, and
government employees - Trying to make the West and Great Plains safe for
livestock and big game
4- 1973 the ESA (Endangered Species Act) was passed
- Only 400-500 gray wolves remained in lower 48.
- Gray wolves an important keystone species
- They culled the herds of bison, elk and deer
- The number of bison and elk increased devastating
the some of the vegetation, increased erosion and
threatened the niches of other species - 1995 wolves were reintroduced
- 2004 the number were up to 760 wolves
- downgraded them from endangered to threatened
5Human impacts on terrestrial biodiversity 11.1
- We have degraded 50-83 of land surface
- Cleared 82 of temperate forests for farming
- Logged 95 of virgin forests
- 98 of tall prairie grassland has disappeared
- Extinction rate is 100-10,000x what is was prior
to humans
6Preservation of biodiversity
- Needed for . . .
- Goods services
- Scientific information
- Recreation
- Ecological services
- Valuing natural beauty
- Leaving capital for future generations
7Conservation biology 11.2
- Conservation biology is a multidisciplinary
science its goal is to use emergency responses
to slow down the rate at which we are destroying
and degrading the earth's biodiversity - Identify hotspots- the most endangered and
species-rich ecosystems - Rapid assessment teams (RAT)
- Evaluate
- Make recommendations
- Take emergency actions
8- Bioinformatics
- Applied science of managing, analyzing,
communicating biological info - Tools
- High-res digitized images
- DNA sequencing for identifying microorganisms
911.3 Public lands
National parks and preserves
National forests
(and Xs) National wildlife refuges
10National parks and preserves
National forests
(and Xs) National wildlife refuges
11Public lands in the U.S. 11.3
- Public lands help preserve biodiversity
- U.S. has set aside more land than any other
nation - More than a 1/3rd of the land in the US consist
of publicly owned national forests, resource
lands, parks, wildlife refuges and protected
wilderness areas - 73 of that is in Alaska
- National forests resource lands (USFS)
- Logging, mining, grazing, oil, gas, recreation
- National Wildlife Refuges (USFWS)
- Protected habitats breeding grounds
- May hunt, trap, fish, mine, log, graze, farm
12- National Park System (NPS)
- Allows camping, hiking, sport fishing, boating,
not hunting, mining or oil - National Wilderness Preservation System
- Only recreational use
1360
EUROPE
NORTH AMERICA
ASIA
30N
Tropic of Cancer
Atlantic Ocean
AFRICA
Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean
150
90
60E
0
30W
90
120
150
0
SOUTH AMERICA
Indian Ocean
Tropic of Capricorn
AUSTRALIA
30S
Antarctic Circle
60
ANTARCTICA
Critical and endangered
Threatened
Stable or intact
Projected Status of Biodiversity 19982018
14Controversy over using public lands for resources
- From an environmentalist approach . . .
- Protect biodiversity and habitats
- No subsidies for taking resources
- Compensation to public for use
- Extractors pay for damage
- Federal gvt gives billions yearly to private
interests
15- Developers extractors
- No federal funding for admin of land
- Cut old trees and replant
- Open land to drilling
- Dismantling NPS building theme parks
- Support 1872 Mining Law
- Repealing Endangered Species Act
- Decreasing wetlands
16Managing sustaining forests 11.4
- 3 types
- 1. Old growth/frontier
- Not seriously disturbed by humans/natural
disasters - Land at less than market value
- Large amounts of diversity
- 22 of worlds forest
- Logging threatens 33
17- 2. Second-growth
- Develop after human activities/natural forces
- Secondary succession
- 63 of worlds forest
- 3. Tree plantations/tree farms
- Replant clear-cut one species of tree in
regular cycle - 5 of worlds forest
18Forest management
- Even-aged tree plantations
- Maintains trees about the same age size
- Replaces an old-growth forest
- Uneven-aged
- Variety of ages sizes
- Promotes diversity
- Selectively cut various aged trees
- Used for timber, wildlife, recreation
19Old growth
Building roads into previously inaccessible
forests paves the way to their fragmentation,
destruction and degradation
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21Logging roads
- Increase erosion, sediment runoff, affect
habitats, loss of biodiversity - Expose forests to invasion by nonnative pests,
disease - Access to human pests (ticks)
- Disqualify land for protection as wilderness
22Selective Cutting
23- Selective cutting
- Intermediate aged/mature trees cut in small
groups - Reduces crowding, encourages growth of younger
trees maintains a uneven-aged forest - High grading
- Largest, best specimens cut
- Forest floor becomes warmer, drier, subject to
erosion, fire
2425
15
10
30
Years of growth
5
25Cut 2
Cut 1
Shelterwood Cutting
26Seed-Tree Cutting
27Clear-Cutting
28Uncut
Cut
Cut
Cut
Uncut
1 year ago
35 years ago
610 years ago
Strip Cutting
29Three ways to harvest trees that need full to
moderate sunlight
- Shelterwood cutting
- Removes all mature trees in an area in two or
three cuttings over a period of time - Seed-tree cutting
- Removes nearly all trees but leaves a few
seed-producing trees who would begin a new
generation - Clear cutting
- Every tree in one cutting
30Trade-Offs
Clear-Cutting Forests
Advantages
Disadvantages
Higher timber yields Maximum economic return in
shortest time Can reforest with genetically
improved fast-growing trees Short time to
establish new stand of trees Needs less skill
and planning Best way to harvest
tree plantations Good for tree species needing
full or moderate sunlight for growth
Reduces biodiversity Disrupts ecosystem
processes Destroys and fragments some wildlife
habitats Leaves moderate to large
openings Increases soil erosion Increases
sediment water pollution and flooding when done
on steep slopes Eliminates most recreational
value for several decades
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31Effects of deforestation
- Reduces biodiversity
- Change regional climate
- Destroys and fragments some wildlife habitats
- Increases soil erosion
- Emits carbon dioxide (global climate)
- Original world forest decreased by 20 to 50
- Mainly in tropics
32- Temperate forest have increased from
reforestation (secondary succession) - Some tropics have been replanted
33Forest resources management in U.S. 11.5
- 40 U.S. forests protected
- U.S. mainly losing old-growth second-growth
34White pine blister rust
Sudden oak death
Pine shoot beetle
Beech bark disease
Hemlock wooly adelgid
35Individuals Matter Butterfly in a Redwood
Tree
- Julia Butterfly Hill spent 2 years of her life
on a small platform near the top of a giant
redwood tree in California to protest the
clear-cutting of forest of these ancient trees,
some of them over 1,000 years old - She lost her battle but persuaded Pacific lumber
MAXXAM to save her tree called Luna and a 60-
meter buffer zone around it. - Someone seriously damaged it with a chain saw
cables and steel plates have been used to
preserve it.
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38Surface fire
39Types of fires
- 1. Surface fires
- Burn underbrush, leaf litter, most animals
survive - Germinate some plants
- Can kill seedling but spare most mature trees and
allow most wildlife to escape
40Crown fire
41- 2. Crown fires
- Hot leap from tree to tree
- More ground litter ? greater destruction
- Destroy most vegetation, kill wildlife, increase
erosion - 3. Ground fires
- Most common in peat bogs
- Go underground
- Hard to detect fight
42Preventing forest fires
- Prescribed burns
- Logging leaves debris
- Goats clear area
- Goals
- Reduce ground-level fuel
- Clearing flammable vegetation around homes
- Fire lanes
43- The Healthy Forests Initiative (HFI) was launched
in August 2002 by President Bush with the intent
to reduce the risks severe wildfires pose to
people, communities, and the environment. - By protecting forests, woodlands, shrublands, and
grasslands from unnaturally intensive and
destructive fires
44Healthy forest Initiative
- Congress passed law in 2003
- Timber companies are allowed to cut down
economically valuable medium and large trees in
71 of the countrys forest for 10 years - In return for clearing away smaller fire prone
trees and underbrush - Exempts most thinning projects from environmental
reviews and appeals
45Controversy in national forests
- Timber companies want low prices
- Conservationists want less cutting
- Incentives have been given to FS for selling
timber - Reforesting does not include road building,
overhead costs - Recreation, hunting, fishing adds more money than
cutting timber
46Increase efficiency of wood consumption
- Construction
- Excess packaging, junk mail
- Paper recycling
- Reuse wooden shipping containers
47- Use kenaf for packaging
- Paper can be made without trees.
- One acre of kenaf, a plant related to cotton,
produces as much fibre in one year as an acre of
yellow pine does in twenty.
48Tropical deforestation 11.6
- Brazil
- 40 remaining rainforests
- Gone in 50 yrs.
- 450 tree species/2 house lots
- Loss of chemicals, storehouse for carbon
49Rauvolfia
Rauvolfia sepentina, Southeast
Asia Tranquilizer, high blood pressure
medication
50Foxglove
Digitalis purpurea, Europe Digitalis for heart
failure
51Pacific yew
Taxus brevifolia, Pacific Northwest Ovarian
cancer
52Cinchona
Cinchona ledogeriana, South America Quinine for
malaria treatment
53Rosy periwinkle
Cathranthus roseus, Madagascar Hodgkin's
disease, lymphocytic leukemia
54Neem tree
Azadirachta indica, India Treatment of many
diseases, insecticide, spermicide
55Destroy tropical rainforest?
- Population growth poverty
- Gvt subsidies
- Poor given title to land they clear
- International companies encourage building,
mining - Ranchers move in after slashing/burning
(deforestation makes land dry)
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65To reduce deforestation in rainforests
- Help settlers learn sustainability
- Debt for nature swaps
- Loggers harvest better
- Reforest
- Prevent illegal logging
66Green belt movement
- Started in Kenya
- Wangari Maathai founded the green movement in
1977 - Women's self-help group
- Establish tree nurseries, raise seedlings
- Goal to plant and raise a tree for each of the 32
million people of Kenya - 2003 50,000 members established 6,000 nurseries
and planted more than 20 million trees
67National Parks 11.7
- Established by gvts
- Some need help
- Loggers, miners, poachers
- Native species illegally moved
- Nonnative invade parks
- Too many cars off road vehicles
- Visitors expected urban facilities
- Rangers spend time on law enforcement not
conservation
68Solutions
National Parks
- Integrate plans for managing parks and nearby
federal lands - Add new parkland near threatened parks
- Buy private land inside parks
- Locate visitor paring outside parks and use
shuttle buses for entering and touring heavily
used parks - Increase funds for park maintenance and repairs
- Survey wildlife in parks
- Raise entry fees for visitors and use funds for
park management and maintenance - Limit number of visitors to crowded park rangers
- Increase number and pay of park rangers
- Encourage volunteers to give visitor lectures and
tours
69Nature reserves 11.8
- Conservation approach
- Protect at least 20 of earths global systems
- Nature Conservancy (1951)
- Large private natural systems in 30 countries
- Wilderness Act (1964)
- 4.6 of land protected in U.S.
70Caribbean Sea
Nicaragua
Costa Rica
Pacific Ocean
Panama
Costa Rica eight mega reserves
71Ecological restoration 11.9
- Restoring wetlands
- Replanting forests
- Reintroduce native species
- Removing nonnative species
- Removing dams
72Endangered Natural Capital -25 hotspots
73What can You do?
- Plant trees and take care of them
- Recycle paper and buy recyled paper products
- Buy wood and wood products made from trees that
have been grown sustainably