Download Kellert`s Typology of Wildlife Attitudes

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
Transcript
Qui est tu, jiiweganaabii,
libellule, dragonfly?
GLOM 2006
Wetlands
• Occupy 6% of the earth's land and
freshwater surface.
• Some wetlands have been reduced by as
much as 50% worldwide.
• 40% of the world’s human populations
experience serious water shortages.
• Wetlands: store water, reduce flooding,
purifying process, provide habitat.
Facts about Wetlands in Canada
• Approx. 14% of Canada is covered by
wetlands.
• ON, MB and the NWT contain the
largest area of wetlands.
• Conflicts between wetland
conservation and wetland utilization
are concentrated in southern Ontario
• Agricultural expansion is the major
cause of 85% of Canada's wetland
losses.
Facts about Wetlands in Canada
• Since European settlement, wetland
conversion to agriculture is estimated
at over 20 million hectares
• Over 80% of the wetlands near major
urban centres have been converted to
agricultural use or urban expansion.
• Less than 0.2% of Canada's wetlands
lie within 40 kilometres of major urban
centres (the 23 largest urban areas
which contain 55% of Canada's pop.
Wetlands
• The productive ecosystem on Earth.
• Carbon sinks - The natural kidneys
• Flood barriers - Critical habitat
What Are Wetlands?
Bog
Peatland
Fen
Swamp
The Value of Wetlands
• Commercial
harvesting (muskrat)
• Commercial fisheries
• Forestry (peatlands
softwood and
wetlands hardwood)
• Aquaculture
• Market gardens or
managed peatlands
• Energy production
(peat)
• Agricultural activities
(wild rice,
cranberries)
•
•
•
•
•
•
$93.2 billion (2002)
Habitat
Recreation and
cultural use
Irrigation
Flooding
Water purification
and sinks for
pollutants
Carbon sink
Flood control and water
filtering by peatlands
$77.0 billion
Pest control services
$5.4 billion
“ ” by non-peatland
wetlands
$3.4 billion
Net carbon sequestration
$1.85 billion
Nature related activities
$4.5 billion
The Convention on Wetlands
(Ramsar Iran, 1971)
• Intergovernmental treaty providing the
framework for national action and
international cooperation for the
conservation and wise use of wetlands and
their resources.
• 147 Contracting Parties to the Convention
• 1524 wetland sites, totaling 129.2 million
hectares.
Canada: 36 sites covering
13,051,501 ha
How many kinds are there?
• About 5000 species
of Odonata are
presently formally
described.
• Expert 'guesses' put
the total number of
species at between
5500 and 6500.
What's the difference between a
dragonfly and a damselfly?
• Generally larger, more robust animals.
• In most species the eyes touch, or almost
touch, at the top of the head
• The fore and hind wings differ in shape
(the base of the hindwings being broader)
and the wingbases are quite broad.
• Wings are usually held spread when at
rest.
Does Size Matter?
• How big do they get?
– The Central American Megaloprepus
coerulatus, (wingspan of 19 cm).
– The Permian Meganeuropsis permiana
with a reconstructed wingspan of about
70-75 cm.
• How small do they get?
– The smallest adult Zygoptera (damselflies)
are in the genus Agriocnemis with
wingspans of 17-18 mm.
– The smallest dragonfly - Nannophyopsis
chalcosoma from Borneo, (wingspan of
about 25mm).
Life-History
– Temperate species live less than a month as
adults.
– Some as much as 6 months.
– No dragonfly is known which lives a year as
an adult.
– Larval life spans can approach a decade in
alpine and high arctic habitats.
• What is the shortest life-history?
– Egg to adult durations of about 40 days are
recorded from small tropical damselflies
Who Eats Them?
• Fish, birds
• Other insects (wasp,
spiders)
• Other dragonflies
• Black Bears
• Humans (curry soup)
The Birds, The Bees and
Charismatic Micro-Fauna
What’s The
Attraction?
What’s
The Attraction?
• Power, predatory
• Engineering
• Science
– The North American
Dragonfly Migration
Project
What’s The
Attraction?
•
•
•
•
Flight, power, beauty
Poetry
Food source
Leisure, recreation
– Dragon hunting
– Dragon ponds
– Engineering
• Science
– Green darner migration
– The North American
Dragonfly Migration Project
Why The Sudden Interest?
National Geographic, April 2005
Odonata In The News:
The Rainham Marshes, England
• The Emeral Damselfy (Lestes dryas) and the
Rainham Marshes Development project
(Harrison & Burgess, 1994).
– No go land
– Why declare it a special site if you’re not going to
manage it?
– What’s that thing? I’ve never seen it.
Protected Areas
• Sanctuaries (Britain,
Japan)
• Dragonfly Trails
(SA)
• Khao Phanom
Bencha NP,
Thailand
• Siribhum waterfalls
– flower gardens
• Tourism (Thailand)
Method
• Inductive analysis
• Participant observations
• Interviews (20)
Natureworks
HUMANITY
Humanistic
View
Nature is a
resource
Protectionist:
View
Rights and
responsibilities
Organic
View
We are nature
NATURE
Field-based Education
Natureworks
HUMANITY
Humanistic
View
Nature is a
resource
Protectionist:
View
Rights and
responsibilities
Organic
View
We are nature
NATURE
Protecting the Guardians of the
Watershed Wetlands
• 6% of the earth's land and freshwater
surface
• 14% of Canada's total land area.
• Some wetlands have been reduced by as
much as 50% worldwide.
• Urbanization and agricultural
expansion is the major cause of 85% of
Canada's wetland losses.
Future Outlook •
Sanctuaries
• Protection
• Research
– Multi and interdisciplinary
– National Survey of
Fishing, Hunting, and
Wildlife-Associated
Recreation
• Education
© Morgenstern, 2004
–
–
–
–
Management
Politicians
ENGOs
Citizens
• Responsibility
Action Research?
• Research and education
• Community Activism (citizen science)
• Dragonfly Symposium (July 10, 2007) hosted
by the Ozhaawashko-giizhig Traditional
Teaching Lodge & the Métis Nation of
Ontario http://www.blueskyteachinglodge.ca/
• Knowledge
exchanges
• Cultural
exchanges
• Story
telling
• Artisans
• Signing
• Dancing
© 2004, Bill Morgenstern