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Sustaining Biodiversity: The Species Approach

Sustaining Biodiversity: The Species Approach. Chapter 9. Core Case Study: The Passenger Pigeon: Gone Forever. Passenger pigeon hunted to extinction by 1900 Commercial hunters used a "stool pigeon” Archeological record shows five mass extinctions

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Sustaining Biodiversity: The Species Approach

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  1. Sustaining Biodiversity: The Species Approach Chapter 9

  2. Core Case Study: The Passenger Pigeon: Gone Forever • Passenger pigeon hunted to extinction by 1900 • Commercial hunters used a "stool pigeon” • Archeological record shows five mass extinctions • Human activities: hastening more extinctions?

  3. 9-1 What Role Do Humans Play in the Premature Extinction of Species? 1) Human activities are destroying and degrading biodiversity a) 2005 Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: We have disturbed at least 50% up to 83% b) Disturbances eliminate species by destroying or degrading habitat 2) Extinctions are natural a) Background: continuous low level extinctions

  4. b) Extinction rate: percentage of species that go extinct within a certain time period (page 185) c) Biodiversity is determined by extinction & speciation d) Mass extinction: Loss of large number of species in a short period of time e) Probably 5 mass extinctions killing 50-95%, recovery occurs, but requires millions of years f) Possible causes on page 185

  5. g) 3 levels of extinction 1. Local: lost to one area, but found other places 2. Ecological: so few exist it no longer plays its role in the ecosystem 3. Biological: No longer found anywhere 3) Human activities cause premature extinction a) Humans have accelerated extinction as they used resources, killed for food and destroyed habitat b) We are pushing the rate to 1% per year

  6. Extinctions Are Natural but Sometimes They Increase Sharply c) This rate will lead to at least ¼ of the species extinct by 2050. d) May be conservative rate because 1. both the rate and species loss are likely to increase during the next 50 years 2. current and projected rates are much higher than the global average in some parts of the world 3. We are degrading, eliminating, fragmenting and simplifying many diverse environments e) This loss could cause an increase in number of opportunistic individuals (weeds, pests, rodents)

  7. 4) Endangered and Threatened Species Are Ecological Smoke Alarms (page 187) • Endangered: so few individual survivors that the species could soon become extinct • Threatened: still abundant, but numbers are declining & are likely to become endangered • World Conservation Union (IUCN): Publishes the Red list: list of the world’s threatened species • Probably underestimates actual number • www.iucnredlist.org

  8. e) Certain Characteristics make organisms more vunerable f) Behavioral characteristics: large groups, foraging around humans, g) Fig 9.6 shows % of types of species threatened

  9. Fig. 9-4, p. 194

  10. Science Focus: Estimating Extinction Rates Is Not Easy (page 188) • Three problems • Hard to document due to length of time • Only 1.8 million species identified • Little known about nature and ecological roles of species identified • Document little changes in DNA • Use species–area relationship • Mathematical models

  11. Science Focus: Using DNA to Reduce Illegal Killing of Elephants for Their Ivory (Page 191) • 1989 international treaty against poaching elephants • Poaching on the rise • Track area of poaching through DNA analysis of elephants • Elephants damaging areas of South Africa: Should they be culled?

  12. 9-2 Why Should We Care about Preventing Premature Species Extinction? 1) Species are a vital part of the earth’s capital a) It takes millions of years to replace extinct organisms b) Instrumental Value: Usefulness to us c) 2 types: 1. Use value: economic goods and services, ecological services, recreation, scientific information & continuation of services for the future. (page 190)

  13. 9-2 Why Should We Care about Preventing Premature Species Extinction? 2. Instrumental value: non-use existence value, aesthetic value, bequest value & ecological value (page 190-191) 2) Are we ethically obligated to prevent extinction? a) Intrinsic (existence) value: has a right to exist & play its role. (yes?) b) Genetic value: we should not erase genetic combinations c) Biophilia: inherent genetic kinship with natural world

  14. 9-2 Why Should We Care about Preventing Premature Species Extinction? (shown by human love of nature, zoos, camping) d) Biophobia: fear of wildlife e) Some vary by type of organism (kill pests, protect bears)

  15. Science Focus: Why Should We Care about Bats? (page 192) • Vulnerable to extinction • Slow to reproduce • Human destruction of habitats • Important ecological roles • Feed on crop-damaging nocturnal insects • Pollen-eaters • Fruit-eaters • Unwarranted fears of bats

  16. 9-3 How do Humans Accelerate Species Extinction? 1) HIPPCO: (page 193) a) Habitat destruction b) Invasive species c) Population growth d) Pollution e) Climate change f) Overexploitation 2) Habitat Island: surrounded by different habitat 3) Habitat fragmentation: divides large habitats into smaller ones

  17. Science Focus: Studying the Effects of Forest Fragmentation on Old-Growth Trees • Page 195 • Tropical Biologist Bill Laurance, et al. • How large must a forest fragment be in order to prevent the loss of rare trees?

  18. Case Study: A Disturbing Message from the Birds Page 195 • Habitat loss and fragmentation of the birds’ breeding habitats • Forests cleared for farms, lumber plantations, roads, and development • Intentional or accidental introduction of nonnative species • Eat the birds • Seabirds caught and drown in fishing equipment • Migrating birds fly into power lines, communication towers, and skyscrapers • Other threats • Oil spills • Pesticides • Herbicides • Ingestion of toxic lead shotgun pellets • Greatest new threat: Climate change • Environmental indicators • Economic and ecological services

  19. Science Focus: Vultures, Wild Dogs, and Rabies: Unexpected Scientific Connections • Page 197 • Vultures poisoned from diclofenac in cow carcasses • More wild dogs eating the cow carcasses • More rabies spreading to people

  20. 9-3 How do Humans Accelerate Species Extinction? 4) Deliberately introduced Species a) After habitat loss, invasive species is the next biggest problem b) Species may benefit us, but harm others (98% of food is from introduced organisms) c) Without natural predators, they can take over and replace native species d) Figure 19-14 shows some harmful species Page 199

  21. Fig. 9-11, p. 200

  22. 9-3 How do Humans Accelerate Species Extinction? e) The us kills over 14 million cats & dogs a year due to overpopulation Case Study: The Kudzu Vine Page 199 Imported from Japan in the 1930s “ The vine that ate the South” Could there be benefits of kudzu?

  23. 9-3 How do Humans Accelerate Species Extinction? 5) Some accidentally introduced species cause problems a) Many come in as stowaways with cargo b) Some in ballast water of ships c) Examples Fire ant (killed 90% of native) Burmese python- released pet

  24. 6) Prevention Is the Best Way to Reduce Threats a) Fund research programs b) Increase ground surveys & satellite observation to detect invasions c) Set up inspection of imported goods d) Set treaties to ban harmful invader species trading e) Have ships dump ballast water at sea f) Find natural control methods

  25. Fig. 9-14, p. 203

  26. Case Study: Where Have All the Honeybees Gone? • Honeybees responsible for 80% of insect-pollinated plants • Dying due to? • Pesticides • Parasites • Bee colony collapse syndrome

  27. Case Study: Polar Bears and Global Warming • Environmental impact on polar bears • Less summer sea ice • PCBs and DDT • 2007: Threatened species list

  28. 7) Illegal Killing, Capturing, and Selling of Wild Species Threatens Biodiversity a) Illegally killed for parts or sold to collectors (about $10 billion a year) b) 2/3 of the animals die in transit c) The internet has increased the trade of illegal animals d) Research and Education is a key to stopping this trade e) Trade for pets is also profitable, about 50 die for every one sold

  29. f) Many imported animals carry infectious disease g) About 25 million homes have exotic pets h) Also exotic plants are endangered because of this type of trade i) As these become endangered, their price goes up on the black market j) Species also have value by surviving in the wild k) Some former poachers make money through ecotourism

  30. Individuals Matter: Jane Goodall • Primatologist and anthropologist • 45 years understanding and protecting chimpanzees • Chimps have tool-making skills

  31. 8) Rising Demand for Bush Meat Threatens Some African Species a) Hunting wildlife for food b) Increased population has endangered many species c) Also sold to restaurants as exotic foods d) Overfishing has also caused an increase in the need for bush meat e) This has lead to local extinctions and some complete extinction (red colobus monkey) f) Also threatens carnivores g) Also spreads diseases (AIDS & Ebola)

  32. 9-4 How Can We Protect Wild Species from Premature Extinction? 1) International Treaties a) CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species): 1. 172 countries, bans hunting, capturing & selling threatened or endangered species 2. Enforcement varies, small fines, self exemption, not all countries have signed it b) CBD (Convention on Biological Diversity 1. 190 countries (not US) 2. Reversing decline & shares benefits of genetic resources

  33. Case Study: The U.S. Endangered Species Act page 207 • Endangered Species Act (ESA): 1973 and later amended in 1982, 1983, and 1985 • Identify and protect endangered species in the U.S. and abroad • Hot Spots • Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) colony • Mixed reviews of the ESA • Weaken it Repeal it Modify it • Strengthen it Simplify it Streamline it

  34. Science Focus: Accomplishments of the Endangered Species Act • Species listed only when serious danger of extinction • Takes decades for most species to become endangered or extinct • More than half of the species listed are stable or improving • Budget has been small • Suggested changes to ESA • Increase the budget • Develop recovery plans more quickly • Establish a core of the endangered organism’s survival habitat

  35. 9-4 How Can We Protect Wild Species from Premature Extinction? (2) 3) Wildlife refuges and protected areas a) 1903, T. Roosevelt established the US federal wildlife refuge at Pelican Island, Fa b) Now 547 refuges c) ¾ are wetland sanctuaries d) 1/5 of US endangered and threatened species have habitats in the system 4) Gene Banks, botanical gardens, wildlife farms a) Gene (seed) banks: store genetic information by refrigerating seeds

  36. b) There are 16000 botanical gardens and arboreta containing about 1/3 of the world’s know plants (only 3% of rare and threatened plants) c) Farms raise animals for sale, food etc, reducing risk of wild species 5) Zoos & aquariums a) Egg Pulling: collects wild eggs, hatch them in zoo b) Captive breeding: breed animals in the zoo c) Also artificial insemination, embryo transfer, incubators and cross-fostering

  37. d) Most reintroductions fail because of lack of habitat, individual can’t survive in wild, overhunting & poaching e) Captive population must be between 100-500 to prevent extinction f) Aquariums are good for education, but are not good gene banks, due to size and cost g) Precautionary principle: we need to take precautions when there is potentially harmful events, even if some cause & effect relationships have not been established. (page 211)

  38. Case Study: Trying to Save the California Condor (page 210) • Largest North American bird • Nearly extinct • Birds captured and breed in captivity • By 2007, 135 released into the wild • Threatened by lead poisoning

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