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Species Diversity Seven kinds of rarity From Deborah Rabinowitz Pigweed – widespread, truly common Red Mangrove – rare – large range, narrow habitat, large populations Pygmy Cypress – rare – small range, wide habitat, large populations Haleakala silver sword – rare – small range, narrow habitat, large population Beach tiger beetle – rare – small range, narrow habitat, large population Bristle grass – rare – large range, wide habitat, small populations Peregrine Falcon – rare – large range, wide habitat, small populations Pacific Yew – rare – large range, narrow habitat, small populations Osprey – rare – large range, narrow habitat, small populations Dry stone wall – SW England – home of wall whitlow grass Malaysian tapir– rare – small range, wide habitat, small populations Alpine Lily - rare – small range, narrow habitat, small populations Giant Panda - rare – small range, narrow habitat, small populations World Conservation Monitoring Centre categories for rare species • Extinct – not definitely reported in 50 years • Endangered – taxa in danger of extinction and whose survival is unlikely if current trends continue • Vulnerable – taxa likely to move into endangered category in near future if current trends continue (USFWS calls this group threatened) • Rare – taxa with small world populations that are not at present endangered or vulnerable but are at risk • Indeterminate – taxa known to be endangered, vulnerable or rare but where there is not enough information to say which category applies • Out of danger – once endangered, vulnerable or rare but now considered relatively secure • Insufficiently known – taxa that are suspected to be endangered, vulnerable or rare but not enough is known to be sure • Threatened – any taxa considered endangered, vulnerable, rare or insufficiently known • Commercially threatened – taxa not currently threatened with extinction but where all or most populations are threatened as a sustainable commercial resource IUCN Red Data Books Thylacine – Tasmanian wolf - Extinct? Black rhino – Endangered Nile crocodile - Vulnerable Wood duck – Out of Danger Atlantic cod – vulnerable & commercially threatened Atlantic cod – amount caught Headlines about U.S. backlog of candidate endangered species • ENDANGERED SPECIES: Obama admin confronts 'candidate species' backlog (Greenwire, 09/08/2009) • Endangered Species Backlog to Decrease Under U.S. Work Plan By William McQuillen - May 10, 2011 3:45 PM CT Backlogged candidate species – Florida bonneted bat and streaked horned lark Climate and distribution • Climate, particularly temperature and precipitation, influences the distribution of the earth's organisms • In each major kind of climate, a distinctive type of vegetation develops - for desert plants occur in arid (dry) climates, grasses with semi-arid climates and forests with moist climates • Certain animals, fungi and other organisms are associated with particular vegetation types Biomes • A Biome is a large, relatively distinct terrestrial ecosystem characterized by particular climate, soil, plants and animals, regardless of where it occurs on earth • A biome's boundaries are determined by climate more than by any other factor Biomes Limits to Biome Distribution Limits to Biome Distribution Anthropogenic Biomes – from Ellis and Ramankutty 2008 Global Patterns of Species Richness Global Amphibian Diversity Global Patterns of Species Richness Measures of Biodiversity • Species richness – the number of species in an area – the simplest measure of biodiversity • Species evenness or equitability – the relative proportion of number of individuals of each species in an area • Often richness and evenness are combined into a Species Diversity Index Explanations for Global Patterns of Species Richness 1) Morphological diversity, spatial heterogeneity 2) High average rarity - no monocultures – in tropics 3) Climatic constancy of tropics 4) Geological age 5) Special adaptations in extreme (harsh) environments 6) Competitive "balance" 7) Alternating competitive advantages 8) "All niches filled theory" - saturation of community 9) Productivity from A.R. Wallace - 1878 Richness and Productivity Richness and Structural Diversity Environmental harshness Richness and Climatic Variability Richness and Environmental Age Last Glacial Maximum Richness and Environmental Age South American Rain Forest – Today and Past Refuges Richness and High Average Rarity Global Plant Richness Local Centers Of Diversity Quality of Data Richness and High Average Rarity Endemic Plant Species Globally Richness and High Average Rarity Endemic Plant Species Globally Richness and High Average Rarity Endemic Plants in Africa