Chapter 9: Sustaining Biodiversity: The Species Approach
Biological Extinction: No species member alive
Background Extinction: Natural low rate of extinction
Extinction Rate: Percentage or number of species that go extinct in a certain time period
Mass Extinction: 50-95% of species become extinct usually due to a major global change in environmental conditions.
Endangered Species: Species with few members that the species could become extinct
Threatened Species (vulnerable species): Still enough members to survive, but numbers declining -- may soon be endangered
Low reproductive rate
Specialized niche
Narrow distribution
Feeds at high trophic level
Fixed migratory patterns
Rare
Commercially valuable
Large territories
Species provide natural resources and natural services
Insects for pollution
Birds for pest control
Most species contribute economic services
Plants for food, fuel, lumber, medicine
It will take 5-10 million years to regain species’ biodiversity
Many people believe species have an intrinsic right to exist
H: Habitat destruction, degradation, and fragmentation
I: Invasive (nonnative) species
P: Population and resource use growth
P: Pollution
C: Climate change
O: Overexploitation
Habitat Fragmentation: Large intact habitat divided by roads, crops, urban development
Leaves habitat islands
Blocks migration routes
Divides populations
Inhibits migrations and colonization
Inhibits finding food
Underlying Causes
Population growth
Rising resource use
Poverty
Direct Causes
Habitat loss
Invasive species
Pollution
Climate change
Overfishing
Bioaccumulation: Increase in concentration of a pollutant in an organism
Biomagnification: Increase in concentration of a pollutant in a food chain
Pesticides
Ex: DDT Banned in the U.S. in 1972
Characteristics of Successful Invader Species
High reproductive rates
Pioneer species
Long-lived
High dispersal rate
Generalists
High genetic variability
Climate similar to the habitat of the invader
Absence of predators on invading species
Early successional systems
Low diversity of native species
Absence of fire
Disturbed by human activities
Do not capture or buy wild animals/plants
Do not remove plants from their habitat
Do not release pets into the nature
Do not dump contents from an aquarium into the nature
Jane Goodall: Primatologist and anthropologist
45 years of understanding and protecting chimpanzees
Chimps have tool-making skills
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES): Singed by 172 countries in 1975
Convention on Biological Diversity: It focused on ecosystems and was ratified by 190 countries. (Not in the US)
Endangered Species Act: Identify and protect endangered species in the US and abroad. It also does not allow federal agencies from funding projects that threaten species that are already endangered
National Marine Fisheries Service: Protect and Identify ocean species
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services: Protect and identify all other species
Gene or seed banks: Preserve genetic material of endangered plants
Botanical gardens and arboreta are also known as living plants
Farms to raise organisms for commercial sale
Do not buy items that endanger animal species
Do not buy products that are created by cutting old-growth forests
Do not buy animals that were taken from the wild
Do not buy plants that were taken from the wild
Precautionary Principle: Act to prevent or reduce harm when preliminary evidence indicates its needed
Species are primary components of biodiversity
Prevention of species
Prevention of ecosystems
Biological Extinction: No species member alive
Background Extinction: Natural low rate of extinction
Extinction Rate: Percentage or number of species that go extinct in a certain time period
Mass Extinction: 50-95% of species become extinct usually due to a major global change in environmental conditions.
Endangered Species: Species with few members that the species could become extinct
Threatened Species (vulnerable species): Still enough members to survive, but numbers declining -- may soon be endangered
Low reproductive rate
Specialized niche
Narrow distribution
Feeds at high trophic level
Fixed migratory patterns
Rare
Commercially valuable
Large territories
Species provide natural resources and natural services
Insects for pollution
Birds for pest control
Most species contribute economic services
Plants for food, fuel, lumber, medicine
It will take 5-10 million years to regain species’ biodiversity
Many people believe species have an intrinsic right to exist
H: Habitat destruction, degradation, and fragmentation
I: Invasive (nonnative) species
P: Population and resource use growth
P: Pollution
C: Climate change
O: Overexploitation
Habitat Fragmentation: Large intact habitat divided by roads, crops, urban development
Leaves habitat islands
Blocks migration routes
Divides populations
Inhibits migrations and colonization
Inhibits finding food
Underlying Causes
Population growth
Rising resource use
Poverty
Direct Causes
Habitat loss
Invasive species
Pollution
Climate change
Overfishing
Bioaccumulation: Increase in concentration of a pollutant in an organism
Biomagnification: Increase in concentration of a pollutant in a food chain
Pesticides
Ex: DDT Banned in the U.S. in 1972
Characteristics of Successful Invader Species
High reproductive rates
Pioneer species
Long-lived
High dispersal rate
Generalists
High genetic variability
Climate similar to the habitat of the invader
Absence of predators on invading species
Early successional systems
Low diversity of native species
Absence of fire
Disturbed by human activities
Do not capture or buy wild animals/plants
Do not remove plants from their habitat
Do not release pets into the nature
Do not dump contents from an aquarium into the nature
Jane Goodall: Primatologist and anthropologist
45 years of understanding and protecting chimpanzees
Chimps have tool-making skills
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES): Singed by 172 countries in 1975
Convention on Biological Diversity: It focused on ecosystems and was ratified by 190 countries. (Not in the US)
Endangered Species Act: Identify and protect endangered species in the US and abroad. It also does not allow federal agencies from funding projects that threaten species that are already endangered
National Marine Fisheries Service: Protect and Identify ocean species
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services: Protect and identify all other species
Gene or seed banks: Preserve genetic material of endangered plants
Botanical gardens and arboreta are also known as living plants
Farms to raise organisms for commercial sale
Do not buy items that endanger animal species
Do not buy products that are created by cutting old-growth forests
Do not buy animals that were taken from the wild
Do not buy plants that were taken from the wild
Precautionary Principle: Act to prevent or reduce harm when preliminary evidence indicates its needed
Species are primary components of biodiversity
Prevention of species
Prevention of ecosystems