“itit’’s the end of the world as we know its the end of...
TRANSCRIPT
1
Today: Global and local Conservation issues.
““ItIt’’s the end of the world as we know its the end of the world as we know it”” (R.E.M)
Wednesday: Conservation solutions.
Once upon a timeOnce upon a time……
2
Ayres Ed, 1999. Gods Last Offer: Negotiating for a sustainable future.
Agricultural revolution
Global warming
Fires
Agricultural
Increased development
Exploration
And then….
Just some of the hundreds of similar newspaper headlines :
One Quarter Of All Mammal Species Face Extinction Soon (IUCN-- 2000)
Monkeys, Apes Are Being Eaten to Extinction (Associated Press)
Mass Extinction of Freshwater Creatures Forecast (WWF Report)
90% OF ALL LARGE FISH GONE FROM WORLD'S OCEANS (Nature-- 2003)
North Sea Undergoing Ecological Meltdown (U.K. Independent)
Amphibians Declining Worldwide (Boston Globe)
Reptiles Vanishing Faster Than Amphibians (CNN)
Migratory Birds and Animals Rapidly Dying Out (Environment News Service)
Forests Face Global Extinction (United Nations)
1000's Of Medicinal Plants Being Harvested to Extinction (Australian Broadcasting Co.)
25% Of World's Conifers Threatened With Extinction (IUCN)
One in Eight Birds Face Extinction (BirdLife International)
90 Percent of Great Ape Habitats Will Be Destroyed by 2030 (United Nations)
…
“The world today seems absolutely crackers….it’s depressing and it’s senseless…” (Monty Python)
3
Ecological threats:
Habitat degradation
Habitat loss
Species loss
* Exotics affecting the natural species in a habitat.
* Coevolution of species with humans.
Species-Area curves (SPAR)
4
5
Loss of habitat => loss of species
6
Loss of species =>loss of more species
• Obligate mutualism• Symbionts• Food webs (predation, competition)• Keystone species (may lead to collapse of
entire system).
Species gain:Coevolution of species with humans
• Harmless:peppered moth of England
• Harmful:more virulent strains of viruses or bacteria etc. (e.g. the flue).
7
• World’s tropical rainforests are disappearing at a rate of 160,000 square km. per year!
• The Atlantic coastal Rainforest of Brazil used to cover 12% of Brazil’s area; today 93% of this forest has been cleared!
Examples of Habitat loss and degradation:
Brooklyn, NY ~1925
8
194585.4% of
Bahia state was forested=2,235,900
hectares
1960over half
was cleared
The Atlantic Coastal Rainforest of BrazilThe Atlantic Coastal Rainforest of Brazil(450 tree sp./ha. highest richness on earth)(450 tree sp./ha. highest richness on earth)
1990199094% cleared!!!94% cleared!!!
Only 164,825 Only 164,825 hectares hectares
remain!!!!remain!!!!
1974Over ¾cleared
9
• Keystone species.
• Aesthetical: Pandas, hummingbirds…• Medicinal value: Various plants.• Economic: food species, fibers etc.
(e.g. Nature. 1997: the economic value of ecological services –such as soil formation, water filtration, biological control of pests, and production of oxygen–far exceeds the value of the entire human economy. Bees, and other wild insects, for example, pollinate about 80% of the world's major crops, other than grains ... the bees, too, are disappearing. Ayers, God’s Last Offer)
• New and yet unknown species:(e.g. Discovery of new monkeys in the Forests of North Congo. chimpanzee and gorilla mix?; The Bigfoot / Yeti)
Loss of species:
The Species Extinctions Spike
• 1.75 Mio species have been described, but 13-14 Mio may exist.
• The current extinction rate may be 100 to 40,000 times higher than the background level.
• The current era of mass extinction may have begun 50,000 to 10,000 years ago, the “Pleistocene Extinction” or the “HomoceneExtinction”.
10
• IUCN Red List (Global)
• ESA (Endangered Species Act) listed species and extinctions (USA)
Statistics of species loss:
IUCN–The World Conservation UnionRed List
• About 140 countries are members in the IUCN.• Founded in 1948.• Mission: “to influence, encourage and assist
societies throughout the world to conserve the integrity and diversity of nature and to ensure that any use of natural resources is equitable and ecologically sustainable”.
• The Red List is an assessment of the conservation status of species and populations on a global scale.
11
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
• Passed by Congress in 1973.• After realizing that many organisms are in danger of
becoming extinct and acknowledging that:the natural heritage is of “esthetic, ecological, educational, recreational and scientific value to our nation”
• Purpose: to conserve and recover listed species and the habitat on which they depend.
• Administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)-Fisheries.
Tucson Bird Count – human influenceHuman avoiders
(Will Turner. www.tucsonbirds.org)
12
Tucson Bird Count – human influenceHuman followers
(Will Turner. www.tucsonbirds.org)
Endangered and Extinct species
examples:
13
Some Endangered Species of ArizonaEd. John R. Matthews. h America.Official World Wildlife Fund Guide to Endangered Species of Nort(list taken from:
Washington D.C.: Beacham Publishing Inc., 1990.)
Plants (12 sp.)Arizona agave (Agave arizonica)
Mammals (6 sp.) Sonoran pronghorn (Antilocapra americana sonoriensis)
Birds (4 sp.) Northern aplomadofalcon (Falco femoralis septentrionalis)
Fish (17 sp.)Apache trout (Salmo apache)
Reptiles (1 sp.)Desert tortoise (Gopherus (=Xerobates) agassizii)
The Palila - Endangered
A large Endangered finch found only on Hawaii, USA. The species was abundant on the island until the beginning of the twentieth century. However, it is now restricted to a very small range and its subalpine forest habitat continues to declinedue to severe overgrazing by feral ungulates and invasion of introduced weeds . Nestlings are also preyed upon by Short-eared Owls, feral cats and introduced rats.
14
The Cucumber Tree - VulnerableAn unusual Vulnerable endemic
from the island archipelago of Soqotra, Yemen. The species is very well adapted to withstand drought conditionsand should therefore be better able than many species to tolerate any drying out of the Archipelago due to climate change. However, in times of severe drought, trees are cut-down, pulped and fed to livestock, and in some areas this has resulted in its almost total eradication. Declining habitat quality is also preventing regeneration of the plant.
The Anegada Ground Iguana - Critically Endangered
Was once distributed over the entire Puerto Rico Bank, but today is confined to the island of Anegada in the British Virgin Islands . The iguana is susceptible to predation by humans and their dogs and cats and it is believed that this may have resulted in the contraction in the species’range. It is listed as Critically Endangered and a reintroduction program is currently in place.
15
Dodo - ExtinctFirst sighted around 1600 on
Mauritius , an island in the Indian Ocean, the Dodo was extinct less than eighty years later. Some of the birds may have been eaten by the Dutch sailors who discovered them. However, the primary causes of their extinction were the destruction of the forest (which cut off the Dodo's food supply), and the animals that the sailors brought with them, including cats, rats, and pigs, which destroyed Dodo nests .
(American Museum of Natural History)
Passenger Pigeons - Extinctlived in the eastern United States from
Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. They migrated across this range in numbers so huge that their flocks darkened the sky. A writer once described a migrating flock as "a column, eight or ten miles in length . . . resembling the windings of a vast and majestic river." In 1808 a single flock in Kentucky was estimated to contain over 2 billion birds . Today, in a stunning example of the human potential for destruction, the Passenger Pigeon is extinct. The last one, which lived in the Cincinnati Zoological Garden, died on September 1, 1914.
(American Museum of Natural History)
16
6 floral kingdoms:
1. Holarctic Kingdom: 42% 2. Paleotropical Kingdom:
35% 3. Neotropical Kingdom:
14% 4. Australian Kingdom: 8% 5. Holantarctic Kingdom:
1% 6. Capensis: 0.04% (Cape
Kingdom)
Fynbos (South Africa’s Western Cape Province)
17
Fynbos plants
8,500 plant sp.68% endemicArea of
90,000 km2
Homework for Monday:• Read The Lorax by Dr. Theodore Geisel
(3 copies in the reserves of the library).
• Suggest one possible strategy to get a “Happy end” for the book. (how would you rewrite the story in the first place so it’s happier, or how would you change the end of the current book?)
• Email me your short answer by Monday evening [email protected]