510 likes | 1.2k Views
Sustaining Wild Species. G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 13 th Edition Chapter 22. Dr. Richard Clements Chattanooga State Technical Community College. Human Impacts on Biodiversity. Fig. 22-2 p. 561. Increasing Biodiversity. Physically diverse habitat.
E N D
Sustaining Wild Species G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 13th Edition Chapter 22 Dr. Richard Clements Chattanooga State Technical Community College
Human Impacts on Biodiversity Fig. 22-2 p. 561
Increasing Biodiversity • Physically diverse habitat • Moderate environmental disturbance • Small variations in conditions • Middle stages of ecological succession
Decreasing Biodiversity • Environmental stress • Large environmental disturbance • Extreme environmental conditions • Severe limiting factors • Introduction of alien species • Geographic isolation
US Diversity Fig. 22-3 p. 562
Strategies for Protecting Biodiversity • Species approach • Ecosystem approach Fig. 22-5 p. 563
Species Extinction • Local extinction • Ecological extinction • Biological extinction
Endangered and Threatened Species • Endangered species • Threatened (vulnerable) species • Rare species Fig. 22-7 p. 564 Florida manatee Northern spotted owl (threatened) Bannerman's turaco (Africa) Gray wolf Florida panther © 2004 Brooks/Cole-Thomson Learning
Extinction Risks • Factors: population size, habitat, and genetics • Population viability analysis • Minimum viable population • Minimum dynamic area • Characteristics of extinction-prone species (refer to Fig. 22-8 p. 566)
Extinction Rates • Background (natural) rate of extinction • Massextinction • Adaptiveradiations
Why Should We Care About Biodiversity? • Instrumental value • Intrinsic value See Spotlight p. 571 Fig. 22-10p. 569
Causes of Depletion of Wild Species • Human population growth • Failure to value the environment or ecological services • Increasing per capita resource use • Increasing use of Earth’s primary productivity • Poverty
Causes of Premature Extinction of Wild Species • Habitat degradation • Introduction of non-native species Fig. 22-12 p. 572
Threats from Nonnative Species Arrival Roles of non- native species Examples (p. 576) See Connections p. 577 and Case Study p. 579 Fig. 22-19 p. 579
Other Extinction Threats Hunting and Poaching Predators and Pest Control Exotic Pets and Decorative Plants Climate Change and Pollution
Protecting Wild Species: The Research and Legal Approaches • Bioinformatics • International Treaties: CITES • National Laws: Lacey Act Endangered Species Act • Habitat conservation plans
Protecting Wild Species: The Sanctuary Approach • Wildlife refuges and protected areas • Gene banks, botanical gardens, and farms • Zoos and Aquariums
Wildlife Management • Laws regulating hunting and fishing • Harvest quotas • Population management plants • Improving habitat • Treaties and laws for migrating species
Sustaining Terrestrial Biodiversity: The Ecosystem Approach G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 13th Edition Chapter 23 Dr. Richard Clements Chattanooga State Technical Community College
Land Use in the World Fig. 23-2 p. 595
Land Use in the United States Rangeland and pasture 29% Fig. 23-3 p. 595
Types of US Public Lands • Multiple-use lands: National Forests; National Resource Lands • Moderately-restricted use lands: National Wildlife Refuges • Restricted-use lands: National Park System; National Wilderness Preservation System
US Public Lands Fig. 23-4 p. 596
Managing US Public Land • Biodiversity and ecological function • No subsidies or tax breaks for use • Public should get fair compensation • Users held responsible for actions • Takings and property rights
Managing and Sustaining Forests Ecological Importance of Forests • Food webs and energy flow • Water regulation • Local and regional climate • Numerous habitats and niches • Air purification
Managing and Sustaining Forests Economic Importance of Forests • Fuelwood (50% of global forest use) • Industrial timber and lumber • Pulp and paper • Medicines • Mineral extraction and recreation
Forest Structure Fig. 23-9 p. 601
Types of Forests • Old-growth (frontier) forests • Second-growth forests • Tree farms/plantation Fig. 23-18 p. 609
Forest Management • Rotation cycle • Even-aged management • Industrial forestry • Uneven-aged management • Improved diversity • Sustainable production • Multiple-use
Management Strategies Fig. 23-11 p. 601 Fig. 23-12 p. 602
Logging Roads • Increased erosion and runoff • Habitat fragmentation • Pathways for exotic species • Accessibility to humans Fig. 23-13 p. 602
Harvesting Trees • Selective cutting • High-grading • Shelterwood cutting • Seed-tree cutting • Clearcutting • Strip cutting Fig. 23-14 p. 603
Sustainable Forestry • Longer rotations • Selective or strip cutting • Minimize fragmentation • Improved road building techniques • Certified sustainable grown(See Solutions p. 598)
Pathogens Fungal Diseases • Chestnut blight • Dutch elm disease Insect Pests • Bark beetles • Gypsy moth
Fire Fig. 23-17 p. 607 • Surface fires • Crown fires
Forest Resources and Management in the United States • Habitat for threatened and endangered species • Water purification services • Recreation • 3% of timber harvest • Sustainable yield and multiple use • Substitutes for tree products
Tropical Deforestation • Rapid and increasing • Loss of biodiversity • Cultural extinction • Unsustainable agriculture and ranching • Clearing for cash crop plantations • Commercial logging • Fuelwood
Degradation of Tropical Forests Fig. 23-22 p. 615
Reducing Tropical Deforestation • Identification of critical ecosystems • Reducing poverty and population growth • Sustainable tropical agriculture • Encourage protection of large tracts • Debt-for-nature swaps • Less destructive harvesting methods
The Fuelwood Crisis • Planting fast-growing fuelwood plants • Burning wood more efficiently • Switching to other fuels Fig. 23-25 p. 618
Managing and Sustaining National Parks • Most parks are too small to maintain biodiversity • Invasion by exotic species • Popularity a major problem • Traffic jams and air pollution • Visitor impact (noise) • Natural regulation • Better pay for park staff
Establishing, Designing, and Managing Nature Reserves • Include some moderate disturbance • Sustain natural ecological processes • Protect most important areas • Buffer zones • Gap analysis See Solutions p. 625 • Wilderness areas
Ecological Restoration • Ecological restoration • Restoration ecology • Rehabilitation See Individuals Matter p. 630 • Replacement • Creating artificial ecosystems • Natural restoration
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 13th Edition Chapter 24 Dr. Richard Clements Chattanooga State Technical Community College
The Importance of Aquatic Biodiversity • Coral reefs • Estuaries • Deep ocean floor • Food items Fig. 24-2 p. 636 • Many chemicals • Medicines and drugs
Human Impacts on Aquatic Biodiversity • Species loss and endangerment • Marine habitat loss and degradation • Freshwater habitat loss and degradation • Overfishing • Nonnative species • Pollution and global warming
Protecting and Sustaining Marine Biodiversity • Protect endangered and threatened species • Establish protected areas • Integrated coastal management • Regulating and preventing ocean pollution • Sustainable management of marine fisheries
Managing and Sustaining the World’s Marine Fisheries • Fishery regulations • Economic approaches • Bycatch reduction • Protected areas See Spotlight p. 650 • Nonnative species • Consumer information • Aquaculture
Protecting, Sustaining, and Restoring Wetlands Fig. 24-12 p. 653 • Regulations • Mitigation banking • Land use planning • Wetlands restoration • Control of invasive species See Individuals Matter p. 652
Protecting, Sustaining, and Restoring Lakes Fig. 24-13 p. 655 • Pollution • Invasive species • Water levels • Cultural eutrophication