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Conserving Life. Biodiversity . The variety of life in an ecosystem. Biodiversity increases as you near the equator. 3 most diverse biomes:. Coral Reef Tropical Rainforest Wetlands Marsh. Why is Biodiversity important?. Beautiful and scenic Good for our health and an ecosystem’s health
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Biodiversity • The variety of life in an ecosystem.
3 most diverse biomes: • Coral Reef • Tropical Rainforest • Wetlands Marsh
Why is Biodiversity important? • Beautiful and scenic • Good for our health and an ecosystem’s health • (diet, medicines, and disease prevention)
Extinct species • A species once present on Earth but has died out
Endangered species • A species in danger of becoming extinct. http://webecoist.com/2008/11/03/strange-rare-bizarre-endangered-flowers-plants-and-trees/
Threatened species • A species likely to become endangered in the near future.
What causes the loss of biodiversity? “HIPPO” • Habitat Loss • Invasive Species • Poaching • Pollution • Over population by humans
1. Habitat Loss • Deforestation • Slash and burn • Makes soil more fertile for farming • Nutrient poor soil in rain forest
Negative Effects of Deforestation • Loss of habitat – crowds out species • Increases levels of CO2 – contributing to global warming
Encroachment • Slowly moving into a species’ habitat • Examples • Road building & farming and housing development
2. Invasive Species • Species that are introduced into an environment they are not originally from • Synonyms for exotic: alien, feral, invasive, introduced
Cane Toads • Released on purpose to kill cane beetles • Skin contains deadly toxins • Practically no predators • 101 have turned into 200 million over 70 years http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090326.wcane0326/BNStory/Science/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bart_vs._Australia
Fire Ants • Stowed away on ship to Alabama • Sting feels like burn • Kills native insects
Killer Bees • More aggressive honey bees • Escaped from lab in Brazil • Kills native bee species
Non-harmful invasive species • Wheat • Rice • Dogs • Cats • Horses • Pigs • Cows • Goats
Invasive species in FL A Burmese python attempted to eat an alligator
What’s the problem? • Crowd out native species • No predators • Decreases biodiversity
3. Poaching • Illegal hunting (killing) OR • Illegally removing a species from its habitat
Poached Species • Big Cats – Fur • Elephants – Ivory • Rhinoceros – Horns • Orangutans – Pets • Macaws – Pets “In 2005 there were nearly 88,000 mammals, 1.3 million reptiles and 203 million fish imported illegally into the United States.” -Reuters
Poaching http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=7513626
4. Pollution • Water Pollution • Air Pollution • Ground Pollution
Water Pollution • Pesticides
Pesticide Use • Pesticide= chemicals used to kill a pest (rodent, insect, fungus, etc.) • Runoff with rainwater puts it into local water systems. • Disrupts aquatic food chains
DDT • Pesticide used to kill mosquitoes • Blamed for decline in bird of prey populations • Fish in polluted water eaten by birds • Travels up the food chain • Top predators (eagles, peregrine falcons) affected most
These birds lay eggs with thin shells • U.S. banned DDT in 1972 • DDT still used in tropical locations to fight malaria • Some oppose ban due to DDT’s ability to fight malaria
Fertilizer Use • Runoff into lakes • Causes rapid algae growth (algae bloom)
Algae blocks sunlight and…. • Plants die (less oxygen) • Decomposers break down dead plants (& use up oxygen) • No oxygen available to other animals and they “suffocate”
Mercury • Mercury released into the air when burned, and mixes with rainfall to get into the water. • Found in high quantities in fish • Can damage nervous and reproductive systems (Pregnant women and young kids at highest risk)
Hatters used mercury to shape felt hats and often were poisoned. “Mad as a Hatter” references this.
Mercury is often combined with other metals for fillings (ADA says this is safe)
Air Pollution • Pollutants released into air usually from burning fossil fuels
Air Pollution causes… • Global warming • Ozone depletion • Acid Rain • Carbon Monoxide poisoning
Ground Pollution • Soil becomes polluted when air pollutants drift to the ground or when water leaves pollutants behind as it flows through the soil.
Overpopulation • As more humans are added to our planet, the demand for natural resources (for energy, food and shelter) increases and more land is cleared for development.