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Lesson 5: Biological Diversity. Big Question Big Question: Can We Save Endangered Species and Keep Biological Diversity High?. What Is Biological Diversity?. Biological diversity is the wealth of species that live on Earth
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Lesson 5: Biological Diversity Big Question Big Question: Can We Save Endangered Species and Keep Biological Diversity High?
What Is Biological Diversity? Biological diversity is the wealth of species that live on Earth Commonly expressed as the number of species or genetic types in an area
Biological Evolution • An important question about biological diversity is "How did it all come about?" • In the 19th century, Charles Darwin proposed an explanation that became known as biological evolution • It is the change in inherited characteristics of a population from generation to generation • Ultimately, it can result in new species
Mutation • Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) carries inherited information from one generation of cells to the next • The chemical information for a single characteristic is a gene • The genetic makeup of an individual or group is a genotype
Selection Change is not always for the better. Mutation can result in a new species whether or not that species is better adapted to the environment than its parent species. Individuals with characteristics making them better able to survive and reproduce leave more offspring than others; they are more fit. This process of increasing the proportion of better-adapted offspring is natural selection.
Migration Geographic isolation can lead to divergent evolution. The two populations may change so much that they can no longer reproduce together.
Genetic Drift Sometimes changes in genetic makeup of a population occur simply from chance: drift. Genetic drift can be a problem for rare or endangered species. • Lower fitness traits may dominate. • Small size of the population reduces genetic variability.
Island Ecology • Islands have fewer species than continents, and the smaller the island, the fewer the species, on average. • Also, the farther away an island is from a continent, the fewer species it will have.
Adaptive Radiation Isolation on remote islands can lead to adaptive radiation. An example is Hawaiian Honeycreepers.
How many Species on Earth? See the Wikipedia article on Species. www.wildlifeinstitute.org/press_gallery.htm http://www.worldproutassembly.org/
What Can We Do to SaveEndangered Species? How many species are threatened with extinction? According to the IUCN Red Book of Threatened Species • 23% of mammals, 12% of birds, 4% of reptiles, 31% of amphibians, and 3% of fish; and • 3% of plants.
Endangered and Threatened Species What does it mean to call a species endangered or threatened? Endangered species means any species which is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range. Threatened species means any species which is likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range.
Why Save Endangered Species? Taken from http://www.fws.gov/endangered/
How a Species BecomesEndangered and Extinct • Extinction is the rule of nature • Local extinction is when a species disappears from a part of its range • Global extinction is when a species can no longer be found anywhere • Rates of extinctions have varied greatly over geologic time
Mass Extinctions The fossil record suggests that there have been several periods of mass extinction and other periods of rapid evolution of new species
Causes of Mass Extinction • Six major mass extinctions occurred during the past 550 million years • The end of the dinosaurs about 65 million years ago – asteroid impact? • Megafauna extinctions 20,000–10,000 years ago at the end of the last great continental glaciation period • The rate of extinctions has increased greatly since the Industrial Revolution
How People Cause Extinctionsand Affect Biological Diversity Some ways we cause extinction: • hunting or harvesting • disrupting or eliminating habitats • introducing exotic species • polluting
The Good News: The Statusof Some Species Has Improved Success stories include • Elephant seals; • Sea otters; • Recovery of bird populations after the ban on DDT; and • Blue and gray whales. Link: "Living with alligators: A Florida reality" at http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/UW230
Chapter 5: Biological Diversity Questions? E-mail your TA. eschelp@u.washington.edu