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Biodiversity McNeely (1988) defined “Biodiversity is a comprehensive word for the degree of nature’s variety, including both the number and frequency of ecosystem, species and genes in a given assemblage.” BBA3(Gajaseni) 1 Level of Biodiversity • 3 level of biodiversity are considered: 1. Genetics diversity 2. Species diversity 3. Ecosystem diversity BBA3(Gajaseni) 2 BBA3(Gajaseni) 3 BBA3(Gajaseni) 4 BBA3(Gajaseni) 5 BBA3(Gajaseni) 6 BBA3(Gajaseni) 7 • 1.4 million species of flora, fauna and microbes have been examined, named and classified. • Scientists estimate total species diversity 5-30 million species on earth that have not yet been explored. BBA3(Gajaseni) 8 Value of Biodiversity • Biodiversity at all levels contribute and sustain human life and economic activity • Biodiversity provides ‘biological wealth’ • Species is directly useful to humans, such as food, medicines, fuel, construction materials, and other utilitarian needs. BBA3(Gajaseni) 9 But, these species currently used are only a tiny fraction of total species diversity. ???? BBA3(Gajaseni) 10 Species diversity values • Species have use values such as: – raw materials – foods – fiber plants – medicines – bioenergy – natural pesticides – scientific and educational materials BBA3(Gajaseni) 11 Table 18-2 Modern Drugs from Traditional Medicines. These Drugs Were Discovered by Traditional Healers and Developed by Pharmaceutical Researec. BBA3(Gajaseni) 12 Genetic diversity value •I t i s f o c u s i n g o n : – Genetic resources – Commercial products (Agricultural or pharmaceutical products) – Genetic modification – Genetic engineering • It is difficult to provide the monetary values. BBA3(Gajaseni) 13 Ecosystem diversity value • It provides lots of services to the whole earth which might be valued relative to its services: – food production – energy supply – water supply – aesthetics – etc. BBA3(Gajaseni) 14 Biodiversity in Thailand • In 1961, forest covered more than half of Thailand’s land area. • The forest cover dropped to 28% after 3 decades. • Thailand located between the IndoMalayan and Asian continental biogeographical region. • Thailand has been rich in biodiversity (genetics, species and ecosystems) BBA3(Gajaseni) 15 Biodiversity loss in Thailand • The significant biodiversity loss is related to the loss of: – Terrestrial forests – Coastal mangrove forests – wetlands • Even 16% of total land area of the country will be declared as ‘Protected area’ but still have pressure of deforestation. BBA3(Gajaseni) 16 BBA3(Gajaseni) 17 BBA3(Gajaseni) 18 • What is different between deforestation, reforestation and afforestation? BBA3(Gajaseni) 19 • Deforestation = the act/process of changing forest land to non-forest land. • Reforestation = the act/process of changing previously deforested lands back to forest land. • Afforestation = the act/process of creating forest land where it ‘historically’ did not exist. BBA3(Gajaseni) 20 • Reforestation programs are being implemented but the rate of reforestation is far below the deforestation rate. • Deforestation rate has slowed from 0.9% per year before 1989 to 0.4% per year just after ban logging. • Thailand lost >50%of mangrove forest between 1961 (372,000 ha) and 1993 (168,000 ha). BBA3(Gajaseni) 21 BBA3(Gajaseni) 22 BBA3(Gajaseni) 23 BBA3(Gajaseni) 24 BBA3(Gajaseni) 25 • The decline of mangrove is due to the combined effect of aquaculture (32%), timber and firewood clear-felling, salt ponds, etc. • Marine biodiversity (sea grass and coral reefs) are affected by... – Household & industrial wastes – Sedimentation BBA3(Gajaseni) 26 BBA3(Gajaseni) 27 BBA3(Gajaseni) 28 BBA3(Gajaseni) 29 BBA3(Gajaseni) 30 BBA3(Gajaseni) 31 • Fisheries catch increases at a rate of 4.3% per year. • Fishing yields decline because of – over-harvesting of marine fisheries about tenfold. – over-capitalisation of fisheries sector stimulated by open access – poor enforcement of regulations – input subsidies on fuel and fishing gear BBA3(Gajaseni) 32 BBA3(Gajaseni) 33 BBA3(Gajaseni) 34 BBA3(Gajaseni) 35 BBA3(Gajaseni) 36