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One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the size of West Virginia HUMAN IMPACT
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One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

Dec 31, 2015

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Amberly Morton
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Page 1: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land

• Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the size of West Virginia

HUMAN IMPACT

Page 2: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Introduced species

Introduced Species

– #2 cause of extinction and loss ofEarth’s biodiversity; cane toads

Page 3: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Kudzu, a Japanese plant

Page 4: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

HUMAN IMPACT ON ECOSYSTEMS

• Burning of fossil fuels is the mostlikely cause of global warming

Page 5: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• The increased use of fossil fuels

Impact on the Carbon Cycle

– raises the level of CO2 in the atmosphere

Page 6: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Sewage treatment facilities and fertilizers

Impact on the Nitrogen Cycle

– add large amounts of nitrogen and phosphates to aquatic systems, causing heavy growth of algae

Page 7: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Destruction oftropical rain forest

Impact on the Water Cycle

– alters local and global weather patterns

Page 8: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• The Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest is a study site for nutrient cycling in a forest ecosystem

Deforestation and Chemical Cycles: A Case Study

Completion of tree cutting

Altered

Control

Page 9: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Humans are adding new toxics to ecosystems and they often cannot be degraded by microorganisms

The Release of Toxic Chemicals to Ecosystems

Page 10: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Biological magnification

DDT concentration increase of 10 million times

DDT in fish-eating birds25 ppm

DDT in large fish2 ppm

DDT in small fish0.5 ppm

DDT in zooplankton0.04 ppm

DDT in water0.000003 ppm

Page 11: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• It was once thought that the atmospherecould absorb our gaseous waste products; smog

Page 12: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• The ozone layer

Depletion of Atmospheric Ozone

– absorbs UV radiation, preventing most of it from striking organisms in the biosphere

Page 13: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Our protectiveozone layer

– started thinning due to the build up of CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons)

(a) Ozone hole

(b) Thickness of ozone layer

Monthly averages for October

Page 14: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• The consequences of ozone depletion

– are quite severe for all life on Earth

Page 15: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• The current mass extinction

The Loss of Species

– caused by human activity

– broader and faster than other past extinctions

• At the current rate of destruction over one half of all plant and animal specieswill be gone by the end of this century

Page 16: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• 1. Human destruction of habitat

The Three Main Causes of the Biodiversity Crisis

Page 17: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• 2. Introduced species

Introduced Species

Page 18: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• 3. Overexploitation of wildlife

Overexploitation

Page 19: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Humans rely on biodiversity for

Why Biodiversity Matters

– food, clothing, shelter

– oxygen, soil fertility, medicinal substances

Page 20: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Conservation biology

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY

– a goal-oriented science that seeksto counter the loss of biodiversity

Page 21: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• A biodiversity hot spot

Biodiversity “Hot Spots”

– a relatively small area with anexceptional concentration of species

Page 22: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

Tropical forest hot spots

Chaparral hot spots

Equator

Page 23: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Endemic species

– found nowhere else; common in hot spots

– highly sensitive to habitat degradation

Page 24: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Much of the discussion of thebiodiversity crisis centers on species

Conservation at the Species Level

• The U.S. Endangered Species Act

– an endangered species is “in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range”

Page 25: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Conservation biology

Conserving Species amid Conflicting Demands

– deals with relationships between biology and society

• Competing demands for habitat are always an issue

Page 26: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Sustainable development

Sustainable Development

– balances human needs withthe health of the biosphere

• The goal of sustainable development

– the long-term prosperity of human societiesand the ecosystems that support them

Page 27: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

Habitat Fragmentation

• Population fragmentation

– the splitting and consequent isolation of portions of populations by habitat destruction

Page 28: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• A movement corridor

– a narrow strip or series of small clumps of quality habitat connecting otherwise isolated populations

An artificial corridor

Corridors

Page 29: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• Corridors

– promote dispersal and help sustain populations

– especially important to species thatmigrate between different habitats

Page 30: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• A zoned reserve

Zoned Reserves

– an extensive region of land that includesone or more areas undisturbed by humans

Page 31: One-third of all plant and vertebrate species live on just 1.5% of Earth’s land Every year, humans destroy an area of tropical rain forest equal to the.

• The areas surrounding zoned reserves are buffer zones that support both agriculture and tourism