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Extinctions. Estimates of Organisms. Fossil records from the Precambrian period estimate the total number of species on Earth to be 500 million The current numbers of known species is between 1.5 – 2 million Current estimates of total species ranges between 10 – 100 million.
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Estimates of Organisms • Fossil records from the Precambrian period estimate the total number of species on Earth to be 500 million • The current numbers of known species is between 1.5 – 2 million • Current estimates of total species ranges between 10 – 100 million
Loss of Biodiversity • EXTINCTION - the disappearance of a species • Extinctions have been occurring constantly at a low 'background rate', usually matched by the rate at which new species appear • A world without extinction would be really crowded!!
Mass Extinction • Sudden loss of many species in a short time • Mass extinctions are usually attributed to a rapid climate change, a meteorite impact, or a large volcanic explosion.
Mass Extinctions • There have been five major extinctions since the beginning of life on Earth 4.6 billion years ago
1: Late Ordovician (440 mya) • 2nd most devastating in Earth’s history • 25% of all families were lost • Probably due to glaciation and sea level changes Source:http://www.palaeos.com/Paleozoic/Ordovician/Ordovician.htm
2. Devonian (365 mya) • Effecting marine and terrestrial species • Possibly due to global cooling since many warm water species were lost • Occurred over a span of 500,000 -15 million years Source: http://www.palaeos.com/Paleozoic/Devonian/Devonian.2.htm
3. Permian -Triassic (250 mya) • Largest extinction • estimated that as many as 95% of all marine species were lost • 54% of all families were lost • Possible causes • continents merging to form Pangaea • global cooling caused by volcanic eruptions • Ice age may have followed Source: http://www.palaeos.org/Permian
4. Late Triassic (200 mya) • 23% of all terrestrial families • Possible causes • Climate change as Pangeae broke apart
5. Cretaceous-Tertiary (65 mya) • Also known as the K-T extinction • Effecting ½ of all marine species • Many terrestrial plants, dinosaurs, and reptiles became extinct. • Gave rise to mammals Source: http://www.worldbook.com/wb/Students?content_spotlight/dinosaurs/world_mesozoic
5. K – T Extinction Continued • Possible causes: • Impact hypothesis – meteor collided with the Earth on the Yucatan in Mexico and/or eruption of volcanoes in the Deccan Plateau in India, causing dust clouds, stopping photosynthesis
6. Pleistocene (11,000 ya) • Start of the 6th extinction event (Holocene) • Ice age period • Loss of 75% of large genus (mammals) • Possible causes • Hunting • Climate change Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12721432/
6. Holocene extinction event • The 6th and current mass extinction. • Started at the end of the last ice age 10,000 years ago with the extinction of the large mammals. • The rate of extinction has increased in the past 100 years.
Background Extinction Rate • The natural extinction rate of all species over time • Current estimates 1 species per million species per year. • Determine the background extinction rate given the current estimate of 10-100 million species:
Current Extinction Rates • 10 – 100 species per year – Did you get this? • Some experts estimate that the current extinction rate is 1000 times the background extinction rate • According to E.O. Wilson: 3 extinct species per hour
Recent Extinction Rates continued • By the year 2010 over 500,000 species of plants and animals will have become extinct since the Pleistocene period. • The current rate of extinction is caused by one species: Humans!
Past causes of extinction • Climate change • Volcanic events • Magnetic reversal of the poles • Sea level changes • Collision of Meteorites • Glaciations • Plate tectonics • Competition / predation
Present causes of extinction/loss of biodiversity - • Human Impact • HIPPO • Habitat destruction • Introduced species = invasive species • Pollution • Population • Over exploitation
Habitat destruction • Degradation • e.g. stream siltation caused by deforestation • Fragmentation • e.g.highways through national parks • Loss of habitat • e.g. new strip mall, vineyards, new housing development
Introduced species (invasive) • Non-native species • e.g. green crab, zebra mussel, salmon in Chile • Genetically modified species that invade natural areas.
Pollution • Air • Water • Land • Major sources: • Fossil fuels • Domestic waste • Industrial waste • Manufacturing processes • Agriculture
Population • The global population is increasing at a rate of 3 people per second: • Increasing use of resources • Increasing habitat destruction • Increasing waste production and pollution
Over exploitation • Hunting, collecting, harvesting • e.g. Atlantic cod for food (over fishing) • e.g. sea otter for fur • Wildlife trade e.g. bear gallbladders as aphrodisiacs • Indirectly through consumption of resources e.g. water, land
Resources: • Course Companion • Text by Miller