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Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11
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Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity

Chapter 11

Page 2: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch

Page 3: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

We Have Much to Learn about Aquatic Biodiversity

Greatest marine biodiversity• Coral reefs• Estuaries • Deep-ocean floor

Biodiversity is higher• Near the coast than in the open sea • In the bottom region of the ocean than the

surface region

Page 4: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Human Activities Are Destroying and Degrading Aquatic Habitats

Habitat loss and degradation• Marine • Coastal• Ocean floor: effect of trawlers

• Freshwater• Dams• Excessive water withdrawal

Page 5: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Natural Capital Degradation: Area of Ocean Bottom Before and After a Trawler

Page 6: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Invasive Species Are Degrading Aquatic Biodiversity

Invasive species • Threaten native species• Disrupt and degrade whole ecosystems

Three examples• 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—Will it work?

Page 7: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Invasive Water Hyacinths

Page 8: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Science Focus: How Carp Have Muddied Some Waters

Lake Wingra, Wisconsin (U.S.): eutrophic• Contains invasive species• Purple loosestrife and the common carp

Dr. Richard Lathrop• Removed carp from an area of the lake• This area appeared to recover

Page 9: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Lake Wingra in Madison, Wisconsin (U.S.)

Page 10: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Population Growth and Pollution Can Reduce Aquatic Biodiversity

Nitrates and phosphates mainly from fertilizers enter water• Leads to eutrophication

Toxic pollutants from industrial and urban areas

Page 11: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Hawaiian Monk Seal

Page 12: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

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

Page 13: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Science Focus: Protecting and Restoring Mangroves

Protect and restore mangroves• Reduce the impact of rising sea levels• Protect against tropical storms and tsunamis• Cheaper than building concrete sea walls• Mangrove forests in Indonesia

Page 14: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Overfishing and Extinction: Gone Fishing, Fish Gone

Marine and freshwater fish • Threatened with extinction by human activities

more than any other group of species

Commercial extinction

Collapse of the cod fishery and its domino effect

Bycatch

Page 15: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Natural Capital Degradation: Collapse of the Cod Fishery Off the Canadian Coast

Page 16: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Case Study: Industrial Fish Harvesting Methods

Trawler fishing

Purse-seine fishing

Longlining

Drift-net fishing

Page 17: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Major Commercial Fishing Methods Used to Harvest Various Marine Species

Page 18: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Legal Protection of Some Endangered and Threatened Marine Species

Why is it hard to protect marine biodiversity? • Human ecological footprint and fishprint are

expanding• Much of the damage in the ocean is not visible• The oceans are incorrectly viewed as an

inexhaustible resource• Most of the ocean lies outside the legal

jurisdiction of any country

Page 19: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Case Study: Protecting Whales: A Success Story… So Far

Cetaceans: Toothed whales and baleen whales

1946: International Whaling Commission (IWC)

1970: U.S. • Stopped all commercial whaling• Banned all imports of whale products

1986: moratorium on commercial whaling• Pros• Cons

Page 20: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Examples of Cetaceans

Page 21: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Norwegian Whalers Harpooning a Sperm Whale

Page 22: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Economic Incentives Can Be Used to Sustain Aquatic Biodiversity

Tourism

Economic rewards• Reconciliation ecology

Page 23: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Case Study: Holding Out Hope for Marine Turtles

Carl Safina, Voyage of the Turtle• Studies of the leatherback turtle

Threats to the leatherbacks• Trawlers• Pollution• Climate change

Communities protecting the turtles

Page 24: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

An Endangered Leatherback Turtle is Entangled in a Fishing Net

Page 25: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Marine Sanctuaries Protect Ecosystems and Species

Offshore fishing• Exclusive economic zones • High seas

Law of the Sea Treaty

Marine Protected Areas (MPAs)

Page 26: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Establishing a Global Network of Marine Reserves: An Ecosystem Approach (1)

Marine reserves• Closed to• Commercial fishing• Dredging• Mining and waste disposal

• Core zone• No human activity allowed

• Less harmful activities allowed• E.g., recreational boating and shipping

Page 27: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Establishing a Global Network of Marine Reserves: An Ecosystem Approach (2)

Fully protected marine reserves work fast• Fish populations double• Fish size grows• Reproduction triples• Species diversity increase by almost one-fourth

Page 28: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Protecting Marine Biodiversity: Individuals and Communities Together

Integrated Coastal Management • Community-based group to prevent further

degradation of the ocean

Page 29: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

An Atoll of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef

Page 30: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Estimating and Monitoring Fishery Populations Is the First Step

Maximum sustained yield (MSY): traditional approach

Optimum sustained yield (OSY)

Multispecies management

Large marine systems: using large complex computer models

Precautionary principle

Page 31: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Some Communities Cooperate to Regulate Fish Harvests

Community management of the fisheries

Comanagement of the fisheries with the government

Page 32: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Government Subsidies Can Encourage Overfishing

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

Page 33: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Some Countries Use the Marketplace to Control Overfishing

Individual transfer rights (ITRs) • Control access to fisheries • New Zealand and Iceland• Difficult to enforce

Problems with the ITR approach

Page 34: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Consumer Choices Can Help to Sustain Fisheries and Aquatic Biodiversity

1997: Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), London• Supports sustainable fishing• Certifies sustainably produced seafood

Manage global fisheries more sustainably• Individuals• Organizations• Governments

Page 35: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Solutions: Managing Fisheries

Page 36: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Coastal and Inland Wetlands Are Disappearing around the World

Highly productive wetlands

Provide natural flood and erosion control

Maintain high water quality; natural filters

Effect of rising sea levels

Page 37: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

We Can Preserve and Restore Wetlands

Laws for protection

Mitigation banking• Ecologists argue this as a last resort

Page 38: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Natural Capital Restoration: Wetland Restoration in Canada

Page 39: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

The World’s Largest Restoration Project

Page 40: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Case Study: Can the Great Lakes Survive Repeated Invasions by Alien Species?

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

Page 41: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Zebra Mussels Attached to a Water Current Meter in Lake Michigan, U.S.

Page 42: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Managing River Basins Is Complex and Controversial

Columbia River: U.S. and Canada• Dam system• Pros and cons

Snake River: Washington state, U.S. • Hydroelectric dams • Pros and cons

Page 43: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

Natural Capital: Ecological Services of Rivers

Page 44: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

We Can Protect Freshwater Ecosystems by Protecting Watersheds

Freshwater ecosystems protected through• Laws• Economic incentives• Restoration efforts

Wild rivers and scenic rivers

Sustainable management of freshwater fishes

Page 45: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11. Natural Capital Degradation: The Nile Perch.

We Need to Set 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