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Chapter 12

Chapter 12 . Extinctions . Local- species is no longer found in an area it once inhabited Ecological- numbers of species are so few that it can no longer play its ecological roles in biological communities Biological- species is no longer found anywhere on Earth (forever).

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Chapter 12

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  1. Chapter 12

  2. Extinctions Local- species is no longer found in an area it once inhabited Ecological- numbers of species are so few that it can no longer play its ecological roles in biological communities Biological- species is no longer found anywhere on Earth (forever)

  3. Endangered VS. Threatened Endangered- so few individual survivors that species could become extinct Threatened- abundant in natural range but declining numbers & likely to become endangered

  4. Characteristic Examples Low reproductive rate (K-strategist) Blue whale, giant panda, rhinoceros Specialized niche Blue whale, giant panda, Everglades kite Vulnerable to extinction Narrow distribution Many island species, elephant seal, desert pupfish Bengal tiger, bald eagle, grizzly bear Feeds at high trophic level Fixed migratory patterns Blue whale, whooping crane, sea turtles Rare Many island species, African violet, some orchids Commercially valuable Snow leopard, tiger, elephant, rhinoceros, rare plants and birds Large territories California condor, grizzly bear, Florida panther

  5. Extinction Rates 0.1 to 1% per year 1,000 to 10,000 times higher than prior to humans

  6. Rates Rate of species loss & the extent of biodiversity loss are likely to increase in next 50-100 years due to human population growth Current & projected extinction rates are much higher than global average in endangered centers of biodiversity Humans are eliminating degrading & simplifying many biologically diverse environments

  7. Why? It will take at least 5 million years for speciation to rebuild the biodiversity we are likely to destroy during this century. Intrinsic value- (existence) inherent right to exist & play its ecological role regardless of its usefulness to us Biophilia- love of life

  8. Habitat loss Pollution Overfishing Habitat degradation and fragmentation Commercial hunting and poaching Climate change Sale of exotic pets and decorative plants Introducing nonnative species Predator and pest control Secondary Causes • Population growth • Rising resource use • No environmental • accounting • Poverty Basic Causes Causes of Reduction of populations

  9. Premature Extinctions • Habitat disturbance – agriculture, commercial development, water development, outdoor recreation, livestock grazing, pollution • Indian tiger, Black rhino, African & Asian/Indian elephant

  10. Habitat fragmentation - large, continuous area of habitat is reduced in area & divided into small scattered, isolated spots (Deliberate) Nonnative species- used as biological control; no natural predators, competitors, parasites, or pathogens to help controls numbers; wipe out native species, disrupt ecosystems & cause large economic losses

  11. Figure 12-9b Page 235 Sea lamprey (attached to lake trout) Argentina fire ant Brown tree snake Eurasian muffle Common pigeon (Rock dove) Formosan termite Zebra mussel Asian long-horned beetle Asian tiger mosquito Gypsy moth larvae Accidentally introduced Species

  12. (Accidental) Nonnative species- arrive as stowaways on aircraft, tankers, cargo ships; no natural predators allow rapid spreading • Poaching- killed for valuable parts or sold to collectors; increases chances of premature extinction • Mountain gorilla (live), panda pelt, chimpanzee, Imperial Amazon macaw, rhinoceros horn

  13. Figure 12-9aPage 235 Purple looselife European starling African honeybee (“Killer bee”) Nutria Salt cedar (Tamarisk) Marine toad Water hyacinth Japanese beetle Hydrilla European wild boar (Feral pig) Deliberately introduced Species

  14. Predator & pest control- people exterminate species that compete with them for food & game animals • Elephants, prairie dogs, wolves, bobcats, coyotes • Exotic & decorative- profitable • Exotic birds (macaw), amphibians, reptiles, mammals, tropical fish • Climate change & pollution- human activities bring a rapid climate change • Polar habitats • Pesticides- honey bees, birds, fish

  15. Birds • Decline in population – 70% • 1 in 6 bird species – threatened with extinction • Environmental Condition Indicator • Live in every climate & biome • Respond quickly to environmental changes to habitats • Easy to track & count

  16. Figure 12-12Page 238 Characteristics of Successful Invader Species Characteristics of Ecosystems Vulnerable to Invader Species • High reproductive rate, short generation time (r-selected species) • Pioneer species • Long lived • High dispersal rate • Release growth- inhibiting chemicals into soil • Generalists • High genetic variability • Similar climate to habitat of invader • Absence of predators on invading species • Early successional systems • Low diversity of native species • Absence of fire • Disturbed by human activities

  17. Reducing the Threat Identify characteristics that allow species to become successful invaders & vulnerable ecosystems Inspect imported goods that may contain invaders Identify harmful invader species & pass laws banning transfer Prevention & control

  18. CITES Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species Restrictions on species that cannot be traded or sold (over 30,000 species) Difficult to enforce Enforcement varies from country to country Highly profitable trade occurs in countries that did not sign treaty

  19. ESA Endangered Species Act Designed to identify & legally protect endangered species in US & abroad Americans cannot sell or buy products made from these animals

  20. HCPs Habitat Conservation Plans Landowners, developers, loggers allowed to destroy part of endangered or threatened species population on private land in exchange for taking steps to protect the species

  21. Safe Harbor Agreements Landowners voluntarily agree to take specified steps to restore, improve, or maintain habitat for threatened or endangered species located on their land

  22. Voluntary Candidate Conservation Agreements Landowners agree to take steps to help conserve a species whose population is declining ***All 3 are designed to be a compromise between private landowners & interest of endangered & threatened species

  23. Landowner Compensation • Advantages- • Disadvantages- cost, hinders passage of new land use, environmental, health, & safety laws

  24. ESA • Expensive failure • Only 37 species have been removed from this list • 14 recovered • 8 extinctions • Others removed due to technical errors or discovery of new populations

  25. Wildlife Refuge Serve as a vital wetland sanctuary for migratory waterfowl Some set aside for specific endangered species Bad news- 60% of activities that are harmful to wildlife occur within refuges; invasions by nonnative species; too much hunting/fishing & use of powerboats & off-road vehicles cause damage

  26. Gene Bank Preserves genetic info & endangered plant species by storing seeds in refrigerated, low-humidity environment; store wide range of threatened species & genetic diversity Bad news- expensive to operate; destroyed by accidents; prevents evolution

  27. Botanical Gardens Arboretums Contain living plants; educates million of visitors Bad news- too little capacity; too little funding

  28. Zoos Used to preserve some individuals of critically endangered species with long-term goal of reintroducing the species into protected wild habitats Egg pulling- collecting wild eggs laid by critically endangered bird species & hatch in zoos or research centers Captive breeding- wild individuals are captured for breeding with aim of reintroducing offspring into the wild

  29. Bad news- lack of space & money; major role needs to be education

  30. Aquarium Exhibits unusual & attractive fish & marine animals; education to public about need for protection; not an effective gene bank Bad news- considered a prison; fosters the false notion that preserving small numbers is useful

  31. Reconciliation Ecology • Science of inventing, establishing, & maintaining new habitats to conserve species diversity in places where people live, work, play • Examples • Butterfly habitat- 20+ neighbors provide self-sustaining habitat would attract birds or bat-eating insects • Safe harbor agreements- bluebirds- nest boxes

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