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3.4 Populations and Ecosystem Changes 1 Wild species are important for their economic, medical, scientific, ecological, aesthetic, and recreational value. Wild tropical plants once provided 90% of today’s food crop seeds; 80% of medicines came from plants that were wild. 2 The average specie lasts about 4 million years. Background (normal) extinction rate is about 3 species per year. Currently, it is 1000 times that amount. There are a number of selection pressures acting on populations including: Predation Sexual Selection Competition Kin Selection Symbiosis 3 There are 3 levels of declining population: 1. local decline - no longer found in one native area but are found elsewhere in the world. 2. ecological decline specie is present but can’t play its role in the ecosystem 4 3. biological decline - a. threatened - declining in numbers b. endangered - too few individuals, extinction soon Species need 10,000 organisms to maintain evolutionary potential. c. extinct - means gone forever - when numbers drop below 1,000 for animal species and 120 species for plants, the species is considered extinct because of the problems finding mates. 5 Populations are doomed when the death rate is greater than the birth rate. This is referred to as fatal subtraction. These organisms have fallen below their minimal viable population size. Specialization may make species vulnerable to changing environments. For example, if a food source is destroyed, populations may not be able to eat different food sources. They will become extinct unless change occurs somewhere. 6 Causes of declining species are from: - habitat loss or fragmentation (primary factor) - human population growth - pest and predator control - harvesting wild plants - hunting, fishing, poaching - for sale as exotic pets - pollution and related diseases - exotics have altered habitat giving other species new advantages 7 Genetic Drift is a concept of changing populations by chance and is directly opposed to the notion of Natural Selection, where specific pressures such as predator-prey relationships, or coloration affect survival. A natural catastrophe such as forest fire, earthquake, flood or volcanic eruption might kill off certain members of a population by chance alone. NOAA 8 Several terms are associated with genetic drift. 1. Bottleneck Effect is when only certain members of a population can live to reproduce. This could be the result of a catastrophe that results in a loss of many of the original members of the population. 9 2. Founder Effect occurs when a small group of organisms breaks off from a larger population and establishes a new population. USGS Random chance plays a large role in determining which alleles are represented in the new population. A good example is the different kinds of tortoises that developed on each of the Galapagos Islands who developed as they were isolated. 10 3. Mass extinctions result in large scale die-offs of species. Scientists believe these have happened many times over the geologic history of the earth. Llbl.gov 11 One of the most important mass extinctions is thought to have occurred 65 million years ago. Scientists have found evidence of a giant asteroid that may have hit in the present Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico and blanketed the earth with a layer of iridium from space. Debris could have been carried around the world through the atmosphere and may account for a mass extinction of the dinosaurs of the Mesozoic Era. 12 4. Climate shifts may also contribute to the changes in populations. When temperatures fluctuate dramatically, the normal populations may die off due to loss of food and habitat. NASA 13