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4/20/2009 Chapter 12: Outline Chapter 12 Biodiversity: Importance and Threats Amphibians as environmental indicators Importance of biodiversity Risk to Canadian biodiversity Species at risk Spaces at risk Biodiversity Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-1 Protecting Canada’s Biodiversity International concerns and initiatives IUCN categories of f protection Conservation strategies Canada’s National Park System Protecting Canada’s species Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-2 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-4 Amphibians as Environmental Indicators environmental indicators declining amphibian populations implications international trends Declining Amphibian Populations Task Force (DAPTF) amphibian monitoring in Canada: CARCNET Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-3 1 4/20/2009 A Sample of Biodiversity Concerns in Key Areas of Canada 1. Arctic: LRTAP contaminating food webs 2 Forests: habitat loss, fragmentation from product harvesting 3. Grassland: agricultural use altered > 80% of native grasslands 4. Wetland diversity: removal resulted in habitat loss for water dependent species and loss of water purification systems 5. Freshwater: pollution, watershed alteration threatens aquatic habitats 6. Marine: habitat degradation, species risk and loss from overfishing, pollution, temperature changes Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. Measuring Biodiversity 12-6 Importance of Biodiversity Common ways to measure biodiversity: 1. counting numbers 2. assessing evenness 3. determining difference Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-5 12-7 ecological role of biodiversity direct importance to humans intrinsic and extrinsic values habitat alteration and biodiversity y Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-8 2 4/20/2009 Human Activity and Biodiversity The numbers of species in most “taxonomic” groups decreased from equatorial to polar latitudes Est. 138,182 species in Canada Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-9 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-10 12-11 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-12 Human Activity and Biodiversity 1. Habitat alteration due to physical changes Forestry, agriculture, and other human activities Fragmentation Chemical changes Climate change Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 3 4/20/2009 Human Activity and Biodiversity Species at Risk 2. Habitat alteration due to competition from nonnative biota 3. Habitat alteration due to harvesting 4 H 4. Habitat bit t alteration lt r ti n du due tto ttoxic xic c contaminants nt min nts 5. Habitat alteration due to urbanization 6. Habitat alteration due to cumulative agents of change Resource extraction: impacts to native species and people Case study: 3 Canadian Species at Risk: pink coreopsis; aurora trout; and Peary caribou COSEWIC Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-13 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-14 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-15 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-16 4 4/20/2009 Species at Risk Spaces at Risk Indicators - key statistics that represent or summarize some aspect of y the state of ecosystems 12-17 International Calls to Action Loss of Biodiversity: an international concern UN Convention on Biodiversity World Conservation Monitoring Center Convention on International Trade in Endangered In situ conservation protected areas: IUCN categories Canada’s protected areas UNESCO World Heritage Sites Canadian World Heritage Sites Ramsar Convention Canadian Ramsar sites restoration and rehabilitation World Conservation Union Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-18 Conservation Strategies S Species i s of f Wild Fl Flora and d Fauna F Case study examples: Grizzly bears and humans in Banff National Park Trans-Canada highway and CPR Double breasted cormorant - national indicator species for organochlorine levels in wildlife Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. Sustaining wild spaces occupied by wild species 12-19 Ex situ conservation botanical gardens seed banks zoos - SSP- Species Survival Programs aquariums Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-20 5 4/20/2009 Canada’s National Parks Protecting Canada’s Natural and Cultural Heritage Canada Parks Act: protecting ecological integrity and ecological health Extent: 2004 – 41 national parks and park reserves - vary in size (8.7 – 44,800 km sq) Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. Parks Canada Ecosystem Management Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-21 12-22 Canada’s Protected Areas Role of Parks Canada - mandate - Panel on Ecological Integrity Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-23 National Parks Marine Conservation Areas World Heritage Sites Ramsar Sites Biosphere Reserves Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-24 6 4/20/2009 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-25 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-26 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-27 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-28 7 4/20/2009 The Mont Saint-Hilaire Biosphere Reserve Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-29 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-30 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-31 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-32 8 4/20/2009 Canada and the World: Nitrogen Loading Canadian Law, Policy and Practice Adopting sustainable policies in all resource sectors improving understanding national legislation: g proposed p p SARA - (Species at Risk Act) Partnerships other? Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. Canada ranked 3rd in the 2006 EPI, with 13.2 milligrams per litre (nitrogen g load per p average g flow unit of river basins 12-33 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-34 12-35 Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 12-36 Canada and the World: Ecoregion Protection Canada ranked 7th with a score of 0.76 on a scale of 0-1, with 1 meaning that 10% of each biome is protected d (focused (f d on terrestrial areas) Copyright © 2009 Nelson Education Limited. 9