Threats To Biodiversity
Threats To Biodiversity
Threats To Biodiversity
With each plant and animal species that disappears, a precious part of creation is callously erased
Michael Soule, 2004
Threats to Biodiversity
chap 3
Threats to Biodiversity
As our numbers climb, we expand agricultural conversion, import invasive species, hunt more species, degradate habitat, fragment and lose habitat, pollute water and air, impact climate In short, we are causing the 6th mass extinction, the only biological driven one
Threats to Biodiversity
Major factors impacting biodiversity
Threats to Biodiversity
Habitat Degradation Includes conversion from suitable to unsuitable, lowering quality, fragmentation that lower PVA Causes: many industries (e.g. forestry, agriculture, development, fishing, mining, chemical)
Threats to Biodiversity
Overexploitation Hunting, collecting, fishing (and indirect by-catch), trade of animals (and parts)
Threats to Biodiversity
Invasive Species With our help, species have the ability to get virtually anywhere in the world Direct actions: predation, parasitism, disease, competition or hybridization Indirect paths: changing abundances, disruption of mutualisms, modifying habitat, reducing habitat quality)
Threats to Biodiversity
Anthropogenic Climate Change Climate has been a cause of previous mass extinctions Couple this with lower abundance, invasive species and other problems, a severe impact is likely from climate change Climate change will also trigger additional biological responses (e.g. malaria in temperate places)Fig 3.3
Threats to Biodiversity
Snowballing effect of the invasion of the alien root pathogen
Threats to Biodiversity
Snowballing effect of the invasion of the alien root pathogen Indirect effects
Threats to Biodiversity
Anthropogenic Pollution There are direct discharges of chemicals into the environment, there are also pollutants released into the atmosphere Toxic chemicals (e.g. mercury, lead) are found even in remote areas Also have the problem of bioaccumulation (or biomagnification)
Threats to Biodiversity
Toxic chemicals (PCBs and dioxins) accumulate in fatty tissues
indirect impacts Species dont exist in a vacuum and extinctions usually have a ripple effect Cascade effects such as secondary extinctions may occur E.g. plants with a single sp pollinator or seed dispersers E.g. sea otters and sea urchins
Anthropogenic Extinctions
Anthropogenic Extinctions
indirect impacts Tambalacoque & Dodo
Anthropogenic Extinctions
indirect impacts E.g. sea otters and sea urchins
Anthropogenic Extinctions
indirect impacts
Anthropogenic Extinctions
indirect impacts Another problem is the removal of top predators, which may cause the ecological release of mesopredators
Anthropogenic Extinctions
indirect impacts
So there are many important species in a given community and some are more important than others Dominant sp: common, but also have strong effects on other members Ecosystems engineers: those that modify the ecosystem (e.g. beaver, elephant) Keystone sp: sp that has more impact on community than numbers (biomass) would suggest (e.g. bat pollinator)
Anthropogenic Extinctions
indirect impacts
Island sp
bats
big cats
raptors
seabirds
As a result, unsustainable levels of burning, small-scale agriculture, grazing and bushmeat hunting occur wherever these practices help people survive
1) scientific analysis and promotion of the causes of biodiversity change 2) technological improvements 3) legal and institutional instruments 4) economic incentives and plans 5) social interventions