Download Biodiversity

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

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

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Chapter 5: Biomes and
Biodiversity
Principles of Environmental
Science - Inquiry and Applications,
3rd Edition
by William and Mary Ann Cunningham
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
1
2
Part 1: Biomes
Biomes
• Broadly defined life zones
• Environments with similar climates,
topographies, soil conditions, and
biological communities
• Distribution mainly dependent on
temperature and precipitation
3
ADD FIG. 5.1
4
Biomes of the World
5
ADD FIG. 5.4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Part 2: Biodiversity
Biodiversity - the variety of living things - three
types essential:
• Genetic diversity - variety of different
versions of the same genes within a species
• Species diversity - number of different kinds
of organisms within an ecosystem
• Ecological diversity - complexity of a
biological community (number of niches,
trophic levels, etc.)
13
How many
species are
there?
14
Biodiversity Hotspots
Most of the world's biodiversity concentrations are near
the equator (tropical rainforests, coral reefs).
15
Part 3: How do we benefit
from biodiversity?
•
•
•
•
Food
Drugs and medicines
Ecological benefits
Aesthetic and cultural benefits
16
Fig. 5.21
17
18
Aesthetic
and cultural
benefits
Bird watching and
other wildlife observation
contribute more than $29
billion each year to the
U.S. economy.
19
Part 4: What Threatens
Biodiversity?
Extinction - the elimination of a species
• Natural process - one species lost every
10 years
• Process been accelerated by human
impacts on populations and ecosystems
• E.O. Wilson - we are currently losing
thousands of species a year
20
21
Part 5: Human-Caused
Reductions in Biodiversity
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Habitat destruction and fragmentation
Hunting and fishing
Commercial products and live specimens
Predator and pest control
Exotic species introduction
Diseases
Pollution
Genetic assimilation
22
About 200 years ago,
the American passenger
pigeon was probably the
world's most abundant
bird.
Population: 3-5 billion
Over hunting and
habitat destruction
caused its extinction.
23
Trade in Products from Endangered Species
24
Trade in Wildlife
About 75% of all saltwater tropical aquarium fish sold come from coral reefs of the Philippines
25
and Indonesia, where they are commonly caught with dynamite or cyanide.
Part 6: Protecting Biodiversity
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Hunting and fishing laws
The Endangered Species Act (ESA)
Recovery plans
Reintroductions
Minimum viable population
Private land and critical habitat
Reauthorization of the ESA
International wildlife treaties
26
27
Related documents