Title: Biodiversity, Succession and Resources
1Biodiversity, Succession and Resources
- Evolutionary processes have resulted in a
diversity of organisms and a diversity of roles
in ecosystems.
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2BIODIVERSITY
- Degree to which species VARY within an ecosystem
- Ask yourself?
- Which of these ecosysytems has more biodiversity?
3- Increased biodiversity increases the stability of
an ecosystem. - Increased biodiversity increases the chance that
at least some living things will survive in the
face of large changes in the environment.
4WHY IS BIODIVERSITY SO IMPORTANT?
- The Back-up plan
- Backup organisms - if one species dies due to
disease, there is another one to fill the niche - Maintains stable ecosystem
- If lots of organism, every niche can be filled!
Therefore, stable ecosystem! - Benefits Humans!
- Ensures a variety of genetic material
- Vast rainforests may hold cures, medicines and
other useful resources!
5Video on Threats to Biodiversity 26 min
6HOW DO HUMANS REDUCE BIODIVERSITY?
- DEFORESTATION
- Destruction of forests
- IMPACT Forces many orgs to find new homes
- If cannot adapt, will become extinct
- OVER HUNTING
- When bounties offered for a certain species, it
can become over hunted EX LION - IMPACT With such a drastic drop, will affect
populations of other animals - EX DEER POPN ROSE B/C NO LIONS DEER
OVERGRAZED AND STARVED THEMSELVES
7HOW DO HUMANS REDUCE BIODIVERSITY?
- Clearing land for farming and space
- Replacing a diverse ecosystem with one or two
crops ? - IMPACT Taking away resources for ourselves and
other species - DIRECT HARVESTING
- Taking species out of natural habitat for our
benefit (wanting unusual pets or plants) - IMPACT We are reducing the of those species
in their natural habitat
8HOW DO HUMANS REDUCE BIODIVERSITY?
- IMPORTED SPECIES
- When a species is imported and released into a
new environment - IMPACT New species may adapt well and drive out
existing species - EX Rabbits in Australia
- IMPACT New species often become pests because
they have NO NATURAL PREDATORS - EX Zebra mussels in NY waterways
9Zebra mussel
- reduces diversity
- loss of food nesting sites for animals
- economic damage
10What is Ecological Succession?
- A series of changes by which one habitat
naturally changes into another - PROCESS
- Starts with simple habitat w/ little diversity
- CLIMAX COMMUNITY
- A stable diverse habitat (ex. Forest)
- Will be reached if climate remains stable over a
number of years
11When does Succession occur?
- When environment becomes suitable for another
community - Grasses grow in shallow soil, but add nutrients
as they live and die - Soil then becomes suitable for shrubs
- Shrubs shade out the grasses and take over
- Over time, shrubs will be shaded out by trees
- When natural disasters occur that alter stable
ecosystems - Fires, overgrazing, etc.
- Altered ecosystems will need many successions to
recover
12Stage 1 Bare Bedrock
13Stage 2 Lichens grow
14Stage 3 Mosses grow
15Stage 4 Grasses grow
16Stage 5 Shrubs and small trees
17Stage 6 Climax Forest (100 200 years without
disturbance)
18Succession can also happen in a lake!
19View the process of ecological succession as it
occurs in coastal lowlands by clicking on the
image below
20What resources can we use over and over again?
- 1. RENEWABLE RESOURCES
- Can be replaced naturally
- Still need to be used carefully
- EX Fish are renewable but over harvesting and
damaging environment can inhibit renewal - Can you name some renewable resources?
- Water, food, solar energy, fruits/vegs, Wood,
Bamboo
21What resources do we use that cannot be replaced?
- 2. NONRENEWABLE RESOURCES
- Decisions we make today affect what our future
will have - Most things we use are being depleted due to
industrialization and technology - Can you list some nonrenewable resources?
- Fossil fuels (coal, oil, natural gas), minerals
- PRESERVATION The 3 Rs
- REDUCE
- REUSE
- RECYCLE Brain
Pop Video (332)
22What Can You Do?
- Bring your own reusable canvas grocery bags when
grocery shopping.
- Buy recycled paper products and recycle as much
of your waste as possible.
- Drive less. Take bikes, walk or carpool whenever
possible.
- Don't let heat escape from your house over a
long period.
- Replace a regular incandescent light bulb with a
compact fluorescent light bulb.
23Homework Complete Regents Questions from
Part 3 of packet s 46-59.
24RB WS Part 3 answers
46)1 47) 4 48) 1 49) field then slowly go through
a succession of changes to a forest over several
hundreds of years.. In fifty years, the area may
only be a shrub or early stage tree. 50) 1 51)
The soil got deeper and drier as the lake receded
and was able to support the growth of the trees
which would provide too much shade for the grass
to grow.
- 40) Pesticide killed the bees other insects
that pollinate the flowers. Without pollination
of the flowers, no berries will form. - 41)
- 42) As biodiversity is lost, so are the organisms
needed as a source of medicines to treat/cure
diseases - 43) If the disease effects the plants, the crop
will be lost because all of the plants are
genetically alike. If they were diverse, some of
the crop would survive. - 44) 2 45) 1
25- 52) 2
- 53) 4
- 54) 3
- 55) 4
- 56) as more soil accumulated, plants with deeper
root systems could live there and shade the other
plants -or Ecological succession - 57) Cutting the forest or clearing the land
for crops or a forest fire or - pollution - 58) Soil depth will increase trees will be
present or- soil will change in composition and
so will the plant species - 59) 3
26Practice test Answers pages 116-120
21) The sewage increased from 1950-1970, and
during that time the whitefish, trout, and
walleye declined/disappeared. This lowered the
biodiversity of the lake. 22 -23) Graph 24) 2 25)
If the predators were not hunted so much, the
deer pop. Wouldve remained under control and
there wouldnt have been a mass starvation.
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10) 2 11) 1 12) 1 13) 1 14) 4 15) 1 16) 4 17)
1 18) 1 19) 2 20) carp
26) 4 27) 1 28) Grasses grasshopper-spiders-bird
s 29) 2 30) 3 31) 1