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Human Impact on Ecosystems. Refers to the variety of life in an area. Biodiversity. Why is Biodiversity important? It’s not just about the aesthetics…. Life depends on life… *biodiversity brings stability to an ecosystem
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Refers to the variety of life in an area Biodiversity
Why is Biodiversity important? It’s not just about the aesthetics… Life depends on life… *biodiversity brings stability to an ecosystem *living things create niches for other living things; more living things, more niches… *symbiotic relationships can be effectively established or maintained *effective food webs can be established or maintained when there are more orgs
Importance of Biodiversity to humans? • Production of oxygen and carbon dioxide • Wider choice of Diet • Prevention of starvation • Cross-breeding can happen more easily, making stronger, hardier organisms • More Materials for clothes, furniture, buildings • More medicines
Loss of Biodiversity – extinct vs. endangered vs. threatened • Extinct – no orgs of that species exist • Endangered -- population of organisms which is at risk of becoming extinct because it is either few in numbers, or threatened by changing environmental or predation parameters • Threatened -- any species which is likely to become endangered within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range
Threats to Biodiversity: 1. Habitat loss/destruction (this one is the number one concern!) 2. Habitat fragmentation 3. Habitat degradation 4. Introduction of Exotics/Invasive Species
Threats to Biodiversity • Habitat loss – destruction of area *deforestation *clear-cutting grasslands *draining wetlands
Habitat degradation (damage to habitat by pollution) Pollution: any undesirable factor that is added to air, water or soil. *3 types of pollution: air, land, water
Air pollution -greatest source of air pollution is the burning of fossil fuels *Smog: can create breathing problems -- asthma; irritates lining of mouth and nose *acid precipitation (acid rain); pH drops *damage to ozone layer – natural filter for uv radiation is being lost *Global warming due to greenhouse effect
Global warming • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJAbATJCugs • See page 490-492 in textbook….
Water Pollution • Additions of solid or liquid waste that is not naturally occurring in a body of water Ex. Excess fertilizer and animal waste wash into streams, rivers, lakes, ponds, and oceans cause ALGAL BLOOMS
Algal Bloom: freshwater river 9-23-1999 9-29-1999
Indicator species • Also knows as bioindicator • Species that provides a sign or indication of the quality of the ecosystem’s environmental conditions Ex. amphibians http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6gW-1m1reI
Land Pollution • Trash, garbage, and litter *average American produces ~1.8 kg of solid waste daily • Pesticides: increase in concentration of a substance (toxin) from one link in a food chain to another – • causes BIOMAGNIFICATION in food web • Ex. DDT effects on eagles
Introduction of Exotic species or Invasive Species • “Exotic” meaning not native to an area • Problem is that there are NO NATURAL PREDATORS, so the new species grows unchecked and can get out of control • Ex. Kudzu, fire ants, zebra mussels
Fishzilla video clip • http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/channel/videos/fishzilla-snakehead-invasion/
Conservation Biology • Studies methods and implements plans to protect biodiversity. • Effective plans are based on principles of ecology • HUMANS ARE HUGE PART OF THE PROBLEM, so education is a key part of conservation biology…
Biologist, Writer, Ecologist Figure 50.3 Rachel Carson Silent Spring
Legal protection of species • 1973 – U.S. Endangered Species Act put into effect
Source: http://ecos.fws.gov/tess_public/StateListing.do?state=all = updated daily
Preserving Habitats • Nature preserves 1872, first national park – Yellowstone • Sustainable use – strives to let people use the resources of wilderness areas in ways that will not damage the ecosystem Ex. Eskimos hunting seal and walrus in Alaska Global fisheries – page 503 *rotation of species to catch *fishing gear review *harvest reduction *fishing bans
Habitat corridors – natural strips that allow the migration of organisms from one area to another
Reintroduction Programs vs. Captivity • RIP -- Release orgs into an area where their species once lived • Captivity – org that is held by people; reintroduction of these orgs is VERY difficult, if not impossible
Precautionary Principle • In situations where absolutes are not known but problems are suspected: Set the acceptable levels of the suspected substance conservatively low, and keep them there unless future studies show that they can be safely raised.
Importance of recycling, reusing • CUT DOWN ON SOLID WASTE that will be left behind • Use biodegradable materials that will decay • Recycle materials that WON”T decay for other uses • BE AWARE!