430 likes | 449 Views
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity. Chapter 12. By the Numbers. About 50% of the human population depends on the seas for primary source of food. About 90% of fish spawn in the world’s coral reefs, mangrove swamps, coastal wetlands or rivers Coral reefs have the greatest biodiversity
E N D
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 12
By the Numbers • About 50% of the human population depends on the seas for primary source of food. • About 90% of fish spawn in the world’s coral reefs, mangrove swamps, coastal wetlands or rivers • Coral reefs have the greatest biodiversity • About 1% of Earth’s surface is made of freshwater systems.
Major Causes of Species Loss in Marine Ecosystems (HIPPCO) • Habitat destruction • Pollution • Erosion • Climate change • Invasive species – caused over ½ of fish extinctions of last centuary in the US • Overfishing – lower size of fish populations; decreases marine keystone species All are made worse by the growth of the human population
A Biological Roller Coaster Ride in Lake Victoria • Loss of biodiversity and cichlids • Nile perch: deliberately introduced • Frequent algal blooms • Nutrient runoff • Spills of untreated sewage • Less algae-eating cichlids
Reasons Why Protecting Aquatic Biodiversity is Difficult • Expanding human ecological footprint • Most of the ocean area lies outside political jurisdiction of any one country • Damage to oceans is not visible to most people • Many view the ocean as an inexhaustible resource
Human Activities Are Destroying Habitats • Habitat loss and degradation • Marine – only 4% of the world’s oceans are not affected by pollution • Coastal • Ocean floor: fishing methods • Freshwater • Dams • Excessive water withdrawal
Invasive Species Are Degrading Biodiversity • Invasive species • Threaten native species • Disrupt and degrade whole ecosystems • Water hyacinth: Lake Victoria (East Africa) • Asian swamp eel: waterways of south Florida • Purple loosestrife: indigenous to Europe • Treating with natural predators—a weevil species and a leaf-eating beetle— Invasive water hyacinth
Repeated Invasions by Alien Species in the Great Lakes • Collectively, world’s largest body of freshwater • Invaded by at least 162 nonnative species • Sea lamprey • Zebra mussel • Good and bad • Quagga mussel • Asian carp Zebra Mussels Attached to a Water Current Meter in Lake Michigan, U.S.
How Carp Have Muddied Some Waters • Lake Wingra, Wisconsin (U.S.): eutrophic, excessive nutrient inputs from run off with fertilizers from farms/lawns • Contains invasive species • Purple loosestrife and the common carp, which devour the algae • Removed carp from an area of the lake • This area appeared to recover
Population Growth and Pollution Can Reduce Aquatic Biodiversity • Nitrates and phosphates mainly from fertilizers enter water • Leads to algal bloom and eventual eutrophication, fish die offs • Toxic pollutants from industrial and urban areas, plastic items Hawaiian Monk Seal
Climate Change Is a Growing Threat • Global warming: sea levels will rise and aquatic biodiversity is threatened • Coral reefs • Swamp some low-lying islands • Drown many highly productive coastal wetlands • New Orleans, Louisiana, and New York City
Overfishing and Extinction • Marine and freshwater fish • Threatened with extinction by human activities more than any other group of species • Commercial extinction – industrialized fishing fleets can deplete marine life at a much faster rate. Can cause 80% in 10-15 years • Collapse of the cod fishery of the coast of Newfoundland and its domino effect leading to collapse of other species • By-catch – non-target species that are caught and killed duringy commercial fishing practices (seals, dolphins). • 34% of marine, 71% of fresh water species face extinction within your life time.
900,000 800,000 700,000 600,000 500,000 Fish landings (tons) 400,000 1992 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 Year Fig. 11-6, p. 254
Major Commercial Fishing Practices • Trawl fishing – involves dragging a weighted, funnel-shaped net along ocean floor in order to catch shellfish, flounder; most destructive of fishing practices. • Purse seine – practice used to capture schooling fish (tuna); surrounds and encloses with a net. • Drift net – uses hanging vertical nets in the water column with buoys to catch fish by gills. • Longline fishing – involves putting out lines hung with thousands of baited hooks.
Industrial Fish Harvesting Methods are Vacuuming the Seas • Trawl fishing – shrimp & scallops • Purse seine – tuna & mackarel • Longline fishing – tuna, swordfish & sharks • Drift net – 1992 ban on using nets longer than 2.5 km
Aquaculture • Deep sea aquaculture cage • Form of “fish farming” • These strains of fish are usually weaker than the “wild” form of the species. If weaker strains escape into the wild, could weaken wild population.
Protect and Sustain Marine Biodiversity • We can help to sustain marine biodiversity by • Using laws and incentives to protect species • Setting aside marine reserves to protect ecosystems • Using community-based coastal management • Page 261
Legislation • Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) 1973 • Global Treaty on Migratory Species 1979 • US Marine Mammal Protection Act 1972 • US Endangered Species Act 1973 • US Whale Conservation & Protection Act 1976 • International Convention on Biological Diversity 1995
International Whaling Commission • Established by the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling in 1946 • Allows Eskimos to continue hunting whales (cultural reasons) • Japan, Norway and Iceland kill about 1300 whales per year for “scientific purposes” • Japan more than doubled whaling catch in 2005
Protecting Whales: Success Story… So Far • Cetaceans: Toothed whales and baleen whales • 1946: International Whaling Commission (IWC) – set annual quotas • 1970: U.S. • Stopped all commercial whaling • Banned all imports of whale products • 1986: moratorium on commercial whaling • Japan ,Norway, Iceland, Russia do not support the IWC ban
Economic Incentives Can Be Used to Sustain Aquatic Biodiversity • Tourism – example : sea turtles, worth more to local communities alive than dead (WWF) • Economic rewards
Marine Sanctuaries Protect Ecosystems and Species • Offshore fishing extends to 370 kilometers • Exclusive economic zones-can take certain quotas of fish • High seas-beyond legal jurisdiction of any country • Law of the Sea Treaty – world’s coastal nations have jurisdiction over 36% of the ocean surface and 90% of the world’s fish stocks • Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) – 4000 world wide, 200 in US waters • In 2006, President George W. Bush created the world’s largest marine reserve in Hawaii.
Ecosystem approach to sustainability • Core zone • No human activity allowed • Less harmful activities allowed • E.g., recreational boating and shipping • Fully protected marine reserves work fast • Fish populations double • Fish size grows • Reproduction triples • Species diversity increase by almost one-fourth
Protecting Marine Biodiversity: Individuals and Communities Together • Integrated Coastal Management • Community-based group to prevent further degradation of the ocean • More that 100 such groups • seek reasonable short term trade offs that can lead to long term ecological and economic benefits
How Should We Manage and Sustain Marine Fisheries? • Sustaining marine fisheries will require • improved monitoring of fish populations, • cooperative fisheries management among communities and nations, • reduction of fishing subsidies, • careful consumer choices in seafood markets.
Estimating and Monitoring Fishery Populations is the First Step • Maximum Sustained Yield (MSY) – model to project the maximum number of fish that can be harvested from a fish stock without causing a population drop. • Optimum Sustained Yield (OSY) – takes into account interactions with other species and provides more room for error. • Tragedy in the commons activity
Some Communities Cooperate to Regulate Fish Harvests • Community management of the fisheries – allotment and enforcement systems. Norway’s Lofoten fishery (cod) • Co-management of the fisheries with the government – sets quotas for various species and divide the quotas among communities.
Government Subsidies Can Encourage Overfishing-$30-34 billion around the world • 2007: World Trade Organization, U.S. • Proposed a ban on fishing subsidies • Reduce illegal fishing on the high seas and in coastal waters • Close ports and markets to such fishers • Check authenticity of ship flags • Prosecution of offenders
Some Countries Use the Marketplace to Control Overfishing • Individual transfer rights (ITRs) • Control access to fisheries • New Zealand and Iceland • Difficult to enforce • US 1995 to protect the halibut fishery • Problems with the ITR approach • transfer ownership of fisheries in publically owned waters to private owners • squeeze out small fishing companies
Consumer Choices Can Help to Sustain Fisheries and Aquatic Biodiversity • 1997: Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), London – 20 nations • Certifies that fish caught using sustainable practices • Manage global fisheries more sustainably • Individuals • Organizations • Governments
How Should We Protect and Sustain Wetlands and Beach Areas? • To maintain the ecological and economic services of wetlands, we must maximize • preservation of remaining wetlands and • restoration of degraded and destroyed wetlands. • Best long-range strategy to reduce beach erosion: • Prevent development on beach areas or allow development only behind protective dunes
Coastal Wetlands • Serve as buffers against storms • Trap sediments and filter water • Act as nurseries for fish, shellfish and birds • More than half of the coastal wetlands have disappeared
Florida Everglades – Largest Ever Wetlands Restoration Project • “River of Grass”: south Florida, U.S. • Since 1948: damaged • Drained • Diverted • Paved over • Nutrient pollution from agriculture • Invasive plant species • 1947: Everglades National Park unsuccessful protection project
Can We Restore the Florida Everglades? • 1970s: political haggling • 1990: Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) • Restore the curving flow of most of the Kissimmee River • Remove canals and levees in strategic locations • Flood 240 sq. km farmland to create artificial marshes
Can We Restore the Florida Everglades? • Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) cont… • Create reservoirs and underground water storage areas • Build new canals, reservoirs and efficient pumping systems • US Army Corps of Engineers – federal agency responsible for undoing development (dredging canals, levees)in Everglades. Ironically, this same agency oversaw the development of the Everglades since the 1940s. • Plan isn’t working……not sure why.
Managing River Basins Is Complex and Controversial • 40% of the world’s rivers have been dammed or otherwise engineered • Columbia River: U.S. and Canada • Dam system 119 dams , 19 of which are hydroelectric power plants • Pros –electricity ; con –salmon affected • Snake River: Washington state, U.S. • Hydroelectric dams removed • Pro – salmon saved ; con – economy affected
Dams and Reservoirs • May kill young salmon as they pass through turbines • Slow downstream migration, exposing juvenile salmon to more predation • May prevent upstream migration of mature salmon
Columbia River Rehabilitation and Restoration • Ecosystem rehabilitation and salmon restoration on the Columbia River includes • Building new hatcheries upstream of the dams • Putting 40,000 miles of stream off limits to hydropower development • Reducing runoff of silt from logging roads.
Protect Freshwater Ecosystems by Protecting Watersheds • Freshwater ecosystems protected through • Laws • Economic incentives • Restoration efforts • National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act-reestablish protection of rivers • Sustainable management of freshwater fishes
Priorities for Protecting Biodiversity, Ecosystem Services • 2002: Edward O. Wilson • Complete the mapping of the world’s terrestrial and aquatic biodiversity • Keep old-growth forests intact; cease their logging • Identify and preserve hotspots and deteriorating ecosystem services that threaten life • Ecological restoration projects • Make conservation financially rewarding