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Invasive species
An invasive species is a non-native organism that establishes, spreads, and causes harm to the environment, economy, or society.
Economic impact
Factors such as agriculture, forestry, and property values that are affected by invasive species.
Environmental harm
Harm caused by invasive species, including ecosystem disruption and native species decline.
Social or cultural concerns
Recreational or aesthetic impacts that influence the identification of invasive species.
Barriers overcome by invasive species
Dispersal, survival, reproduction, and establishment in new habitats.
Human support for invasives
Facilitated by trade, landscaping, agriculture, transport, and accidental introductions.
Domesticated or introduced species
Considered invasive when they spread uncontrollably and harm ecosystems.
Environmental harm examples
Loss of native biodiversity, altered nutrient cycles, fire regimes, hydrology, habitat modification or destruction.
Direct effects of invasives
Consumption or displacement of native species.
Indirect effects of invasives
Changes in ecosystem processes, soil chemistry, or food webs.
Chestnut blight & European gypsy moths
Causes forest tree mortality and ecosystem shifts.
White pine blister rust
Leads to loss of natural resources and indirect effects on forest communities.
Asian Longhorned beetle & Emerald ash borer
Results in property damage and decreased property values.
Hydrilla
Alters water ecosystems and restricts recreational access.
Biosphere
All living and non-living components of Earth.
Biome
Large area with characteristic climate, flora, and fauna.
Ecosystem
Community + abiotic environment interacting.
Community
Groups of interacting species in an area.
Population
Individuals of a species in a defined area.
Biodiversity
Variety of life at three levels: genetic diversity, species diversity, ecosystem diversity.
Factors causing biodiversity loss
Habitat destruction, invasive species, overexploitation, pollution, climate change.
Strategies to reduce loss
Protected areas, restoration, sustainable use, ex situ conservation.
Producers
Photosynthetic organisms.
Consumers
Herbivores, carnivores, omnivores.
Decomposers
Break down organic matter.
Ecosystem services
Provisioning, regulating, cultural, and supporting services provided by ecosystems.
Forests provide
Carbon storage, habitat, water regulation, timber.
Natural capital
Stock of resources from which ecosystem services arise
Natural capital examples
Forests, soils, fisheries, water
Ecosystem services affected by invasives
Reduced productivity, loss of habitat, decreased recreation, altered nutrient cycles
Market valuation
Timber, fisheries
Non-market valuation
Recreation, aesthetics
Natural infrastructure
Mangroves, oyster reefs can be more cost-effective and sustainable than engineered solutions
ESA goals
Protect endangered and threatened species, Restore populations and habitats
Role of FWS
Identify, list, and manage species under ESA, Implement recovery plans
Endangered species
At risk of extinction throughout most of its range
Threatened species
Likely to become endangered soon
Five factors for listing
Habitat destruction, Overutilization, Disease or predation, Inadequacy of existing protection, Other natural or human factors
Habitat protection & exemptions
Critical habitat designated for protection, Exemptions possible for economic or social reasons
Efficient agricultural practices
Can increase yield without expanding land area
Predicting biodiversity loss effects
Loss of species → disrupted ecosystems → more species at risk
Threats to plant biodiversity
Habitat loss, Overexploitation, Climate change, Invasive species, Pollution
Important Plant Areas (IPA)
Sites identified for plant conservation; help prioritize protection
Conservation activities in production landscapes
Sustainable agriculture, agroforestry, ecological restoration
Costs vs. ecosystem service value
Conservation often cheaper than the value lost from ecosystem service degradation
In situ conservation
Protect plants in their natural habitat
Ex situ conservation
Seed banks, botanical gardens
Synergy of ex situ conservation
Ex situ supports restoration of wild populations
Seed banks (importance & limitations)
Preserve genetic diversity, Cannot replace natural ecological interactions
Millennium Seed Bank, Svalbard, Aleppo
Global repositories for plant genetic resources, Protects crop wild relatives and socioeconomic important plants
Biosphere reserve
Areas for conservation, research, and sustainable development
Biosphere reserve zones
Core: Strict protection, Buffer: Limited use, research and education, Transition: Sustainable economic activities
Strict vs. mixed-use protection
Strict: Highest protection, Mixed-use: Balances conservation with local livelihoods
Maya Biosphere Reserve (Guatemala)
Deforestation drivers: agriculture, logging, Concessions allow sustainable management
U.S. examples of biosphere reserves
Managed by National Park Service or USFWS, combining conservation and research