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AGRICULTURE AND BIODIVERSITY: INTERACTIONS AT THE BOUNDARIES By Jeffrey A. McNeely Chief Scientist IUCN-The World Conservation Union email: [email protected] The Sperling Biodiversity Lecture Salt Lake City, 6-8 November 2005 A post-petroleum future? What are the causes of decline and loss? Habitat destruction and associated degradation and fragmentation New ways of thinking Ecosystem Services: the benefits people obtain from ecosystems Provisioning Goods produced or provided by ecosystems • food • fresh water • fuel wood • genetic resources Regulating Cultural Benefits obtained Non-material benefits from regulation of from ecosystems ecosystem processes • spiritual • climate regulation • recreational • aesthetic • disease regulation • inspirational • flood regulation • educational Supporting Services necessary for production of other ecosystem services • Soil formation • Nutrient cycling • Primary production Linkages among Biodiversity, Ecosystem Services, and Human Well-Being • IUCN Photo library IUCN Photo Library © Jim Thorsell IUCN Photo Library © Jim Thorsell IUCN Photo Library © Jim Thorsell Wilderness may be the only hope for the world’s large predators, essential elements of biodiversity Wilderness also offers habitat for wild relatives of domestic plants and animals The main threats to biodiversity Biodiversity will help farmers adapt to climate change SOILS One of last great frontiers in biological research Soil biodiversity: contribution to ecosystem services – Nutrient cycling – Mites & earthworms Vulnerability of soil biodiversity & services Optimizing soil biodiversity for human well-being Taxa in Soil Draft Tree of Life Science: 13 June 2003 Bacteria No human eye has ever blinked at them through a microscope, and most human minds have never spent a moment reflecting on them. Yet the sobering fact is: they don’t need us, but we need them (Wilson 1987). Ecosystem Activities PRIMARY PRODUCERS TREES SHRUBS GRASSES ETC. GROUND COVER SERVICE PROVIDERS •DECOMPOSERS •ECOSYSTEM ENGINEERS •ELEMENTAL TRANSFORMERS Soil biota play some role in every ecosystem service with a biological component (Wardle et al. 2004) Source: Swift et al. 2004; van der Heijden et al. 1998; De Deyn et al. 2003 PRIMARY REGULATORS •POLLINATORS (90% of plants) •HERBIVORES •PARASITES •MICRO-SYMBIONTS SECONDARY REGULATORS HYPER-PARASITES PREDATORS Soil formation EARTHWORMS: •Up to 1000/m2 •Process up to 10 tonnes of soil /ha/ yr. Nutrient cycling Plant production Water movement Source: Kroetsch; Hendrix & Bohlen 2002; Lee 1985; Lavelle Sheikalmudi Tea plantation Tamil Nadu Biological Management of Soil Ecosystems •Lower fossil fuel input •Enhanced water storage Vermiculture beds •Soil biodiversity maintained •Biocontrol maintained •Pathogens & parasites reduced •Nutrients maintained in soil Source: Senapati et al. 2003; Anderson 2004; World Soil Resources Report 2003 SCOPE Human Health Soil Biodiversity Initiative GEF-UNEP project below-ground biodiversity Geospatial frameworks Molecular & morphological tools Biological Diversity & Ecosystem Function in Soils Taxonomy as large-scale International science Production Safe food Soil Health Soil Biodiversity Water Quality Ecosystem Health Source: Fox & Macdonald 2003; World Soil Resources Report 2003, Wheeler et al. 2004 Soils and Sediments are Not Only Habitats for Microbes Animals of many kinds live in or on the surface of soils & sediments 10 tenets of soil ecology From Wall et al., 2004 Soil and Sediment Biodiversity: Food sources for vertebrates, invertebrates, protozoa and microbes Above and belowsurface. Services: PROVISION OF NUTRIENTS TO FOODWEBS 65 BIRD species - 27 threatened - 63 protected 17 MAMMAL species - 6 threatened - 11 protected Many INVERTEBRATE species (e.g. > 100 Carabidae sp.) 13 REPTILE species - 13 threatened - 13 protected 19 batracian species - 18 threatened - 19 protected Slide courtesy of Decaëns et al., in press; Granval 1988; Fiers 1997 Soil and Sediment Biodiversity: Food sources for animals above-surface. Services: Provision of economic base EARTHWORMS & Compost Fishing bait Food for animals Manure piles for compost production Primack 2000 IBOY group; Courtesy of Decaëns et al. in press Soil and Sediment Biodiversity: Food sources for humans. Services: Provision of economic base • More than 2000 invertebrate species • 32 Amazonian ethnic groups consume >100 soil invertebrate species • High nutritional value Edible ants (Atta sp.) Fire smoked Ramos-Elorduy 1997, Paoletti 2000, 2002; Courtesy of Decaëns et al. in press What happens when soils and sediment and organisms are damaged? Change in habitat above - decreases animal diversity below. Species richness 7 6 R2= 0.69* 5 4 3 2 1 0 0.00 0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40 0.50 0.60 0.70 Intensification of habitat change Courtesy of Decaëns et al., in press; Decaëns & Jiménez, 2002 Soils and Sediments Soils and sediments are not isolated. The belowsurface foodwebs are linked. Soils Lake Soils Ocean Freshwater Sediments Groundwater Marine Sediments Wall, 2004