Title: By: Mary A. Rodrigues
1By Mary A. Rodrigues
- The Accelerating Loss of Species
- The Sixth Extinction
2Mass Extinctions
- A Mass Extinction is
- When at least half of all species (including
animals and plants) die within a relatively short
time. - We know these extinctions occurred
- Through the fossil record
- Fossils of plants and animals in early layers are
suddenly not present in later rock layers - Scientists believe that 99 of all plant and
animal species that have ever lived are now
extinct
3The First Five Extinctions
- 1st (Ordivician-Silurian) Extinction 440 mya
- Caused by sudden global cooliing
- Extinction of marine organisms
- 2nd (Denovian) Extinction 370 mya
- Caused by possible climate change
- Extinction of tropical marine species
- 3rd (Permian-Triassic) Extinction 245 mya
- Caused by climate change, plate tectonic
movements, - possible comet or meteor impact.
- largest mass extinction (so far)
- Killed a range of species, including vertebrates
- Only 10 of species survived
4- 4th (Triassic-Jurrasic) Extinction 210 mya
- Unknown cause
- Extinction of land vertebrates
- 5th (Cretaceous-Tertiary) Extinction 65 mya
- Caused by collision of comet or meteor and/or
volcanic eruption - Extinction of dinosaurs, marine life, and many
other plant and animal species - 50-75 of animals extinct
- Global temperature decreased
- Rise of the primates
5How is the Sixth Extinction Different?
- The sixth extinction is happening today
- All other mass extinctions were caused by natural
disasters, the sixth extinction is being caused
by modern humans
6When did the Sixth Extinction begin?
- When modern homo sapiens began to radiate to
different parts of the world. - Only in places where early hominids lived,
(Africa, Europe and Asia) did native plant and
animal species survive in the beginning. - Some paleoanthropologists believe that the
Neanderthals became extinct due to warfare or
competition from modern humans.
7- Quickly after the arrival of modern humans,
native species began to disappear. - North America 12,500 years ago
- Butchering killed off mammoths, mastodons,
ancient buffalos - Caribbean 8,000 years ago
- Lost all larger native species
- Madagascar 2,000 years ago
- Lost larger lemurs, elephant birds, a species of
hippo, etc.
8How are modern humans causing the Sixth
Extinction?
- Pollution
- Warfare
- Exploitation of
- Species
- 4. Overpopulation
- 5. Unnatural Rates of Consumption
96-AgricultureSingle most profound ecological
change in the entire 3.5 billion history of
life(Eldredge,N.)
-
- - Pre-agricultural humans lived in niches in
ecosystem and worked with nature. - -Agriculture was invented 10,000-12,000 years
ago in the Middle East - - Agricultural humans live outside the natural
ecosystem. - -Accelerated rates of extinction
- Humans do not have to rely on other species for
survival - Humans do not have to rely on ecosystems
carrying capacity (how many species a local
habitat can sustain)
10Agriculture (continued)
- Results in
- Modern Humans living outside the natural
- eco-system
- Treating native plants as weeds
- Treating native animals/insects as pests
-
11The Sixth Extinction Specifics
- 30,000 species are lost annually
- (3 species an hour)
- Up to 1/5 of all living species could become
extinct within 30 years - Nearly all loss is due to human activity
- Mostly through the destruction of plant and
animal habitats
12What can we do to help?-get informed-get
involved
- http//www.well.com/davidu/extinction.html
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_extinction
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sixth_extinction
- http//images.google.com
- http//www.amnh.org/exhibitions/dinosaurs/extincti
on/mass.php - Park, M. (2002). Biological anthropology. 3rd
edition. BostonMcGraw-Hill.
13The Great Apes
- Their Battle Against Extinction
By Angela Rodrigues
14What is the Status of the Great Apes?
- Chimpanzees
- 150, 000
- Bonobos 50,000-100,000
- Gorillas 130,000 (wild), 350 (captive)
- Orangutans12,000-15,000 remaining in Borneo
Chimps, Bonobos, and Gorilla Distribution Africa
Orangutan Distribution Asia
15Chimpanzees/Bonobos Status Endangered
- 1. Habitat Loss
- Human population increase Africa has highest
growth rate in world! - 2. Biomedical Research
- Used as models for human diseases 99 similar
DNA - 3. Disease
- HIV
- Ebola
- 4. Hunting
- Bushmeat Trade
Fact The only true threat to Great Apes are
humans
16Gorillas Gorilla gorillaStatus Critically
Endangered
Threats
- 1. Habitat Loss
- Deforestation-Competition for natural resources
- 2. Disease
- Ebola
- 3. Poaching
- Not for food
- Traps for other animals
17Orangutan Pongo pygmaeusStatus Critically
Endangered
- 1. Habitat Loss
- Palm Oil Plantations Slash and Burn-a process
of clearing areas for agriculture by setting it
on fire. - Logging 80 is done illegally
- 2. Pet Trade
- Infants mother killed to obtain baby.
- 4-5 orangutans die for every baby reaching the
market - 3. Poaching
- Bushmeat
18Bushmeat Trade 1 Threat
- Over 1 million metric tons of bushmeat are
distributed per year in Africanot all are Great
Apes, however. - No longer is this done just by poor locals
needing food/income it is becoming a commercial
business - 40-60 of Africans rely on bushmeat for source of
protein - Not just a Great Ape problem many endangered
animals, such as leopards and elephants, are also
killed yearly.
19What Does Their Future Hold?
- Some Statistics
- For every 20,000 humans, there is one chimpanzee
- It is estimated that apes may become extinct
within the next generation - Some estimates even say that some species may be
extinct as soon as 5-10 years! - The bottom line People need to be educated about
the seriousness of the Great Ape Extinction
We started this extinction it is up to us to end
it. If we dont help, who will?
20References
- 1. Great Apes in Peril (2001). BBC World News.
Retrieved May 1, 2006, from http//news.bbc.co.uk/
1/hi/sci/tech/1341609.stm - 2. The BushMeat Trade (2005). Retrieved May 1,
2006, from http//www.rainforestlive.org.uk - 3. Chimpanzee Conservation (2006). The Jane
Goodall Institute. Retrieved April 27, 2006, from
http//www.janegoodall.org/default.asp - 4. Primate Info Net (2005). Retrieved April 26,
2006, from University of Wisconsin-Madison
http//pin.primate.wisc.edu/about.html - 5. Orangutan Conservancy (2006). Retrieved April
26, 2006, from http//www.orangutan.com/orangutans
_threats.html - 6. Great Ape Project (2006). Retrieved May 1,
2006, from http//en.wikipedia.org from
Wikipedia. - 7. Threats to Gorillas (n.d.). Retrieved May 26,
2006, from http//www.mountaingorillas.org/gorilla
s/gorillas_threats.htm - 8. Park, M. (2005). Biological Anthropology (4th
ed.). New York McGraw-Hill Companies.