Ecosystems are the home of the
worlds biodiversity
Ecosystems are fragile and vulnerable
to change but they can also be resilient
Human Population Growth and the Problem of Biodiversity
• Human population has increased at an almost exponential rate.
• With this growth comes an increase in demand for land, food, water, energy and other resources.
• As human numbers grow species and their habitat diminish.
Biodiversity • Biodiversity is the variety of all forms of life
throughout an ecosystem.• High rates of extinction are quickly reducing
biodiversity especially in areas of the world with high human population density and growth.
• The direct and indirect effects that humans have had on biodiversity is challenging as can be seen from the following flow chart.
Human PopulationSize Resources use
Human Enterprises Agriculture Industry Recreation International Commerce
Land TransformationLand Clearing
ForestryGrazing
Intensification
Biotic Additionsand Loss
InvasionHuntingFishing
GlobalBiogeochemistry
CarbonNitrogenWater
Climate Change
Enhanced Greenhouse
AerosolsLand cover
Loss of Biological Diversity
Extinction of speciesand populations
Loss of ecosystemsVitousek et. al (1997) Science, 277, p.494-499
Humans Change of the EarthExpressed as % Change
0102030405060708090
100
% Change
Land Transformation
CO2 concentration
Water use
Nitrogen Fixation
Plant Invasion
Bird Extinction
Marine Fisheries
Vitousek et. al (1997) Science, 277, p.494-499
Biodiversity and People • Places on earth with some
of the greatest biodiversity such as: South America, Equatorial Africa, India, Indonesia and coastal regions also show the greatest density and fastest rate of growth of people.
Biodiversity
World Population
Extinction
• Extinction is the natural order. In fact, of all the species which have ever existed, 99.9 % are now extinct!
• The current extinction rates, however, may be as much as 40 - 100 times the normal “background” or natural rate for extinction.
Extinction
• Paul Ralph Ehrlich at Stanford University predicts that soon, this rate may be as much as 400 times the "normal", average, rate of extinction!
• Much of this increase in extinction rate appears to be due to the impact of humans.– Habitat Depletion– Pollution– Introduction of disease – Introduction of invasive species – Over exploitation
Extinction
• 25% of the earth’s birds species have been driven to extinction by humans (especially on islands).
• Threatened with Extinction– 11% of birds– 18% of mammals– 5% of fish – 8% of plants
Great Auk
Loss of birds
http://www.audubon.org/campaign/population_habitat/
Extinction Rate
The Oceans and the Coast
• Globally, the number of people living within 100 km of the coast increased from roughly 2 billion in 1990 to 2.2 billion in 1995 (39 percent of the world's population).
Coastal Area Population Density
• 3.2 Billion (1/2 of the plant) live and work within 125 miles from a coastline.
• 4 Billion (2/3) live within 250 miles from the coast.
Coastline, Estuaries and Reefs
• While 75% of the earth is covered by oceans, the greatest levels of marine biodiversity are found near the coast.
• This Neritic zone of the ocean has depth of less than 250 meters and so the abundant photosynthetic organisms create a habitat for great biodiversity.
Kelp Forest Near Monterey California
Approximately 50% of mangrove ecosystems globally have been transformed or destroyed by human activity
Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Human causes of Coral Reefs Depletions
• Pollution runoff: nitrates from fertilizers, point-source pollution, oil spills.
• Exploitation: Over 90% of saltwater aquarium fish are taken directly from reefs.
• Increased water temperatures: global warming, increased El Nino.
• Direct Destruction: Boats, fishing nets, removal of coral for sale.
Over fishing
Culture
0
Global Fish Supply
Year
1980
1950
1960
1970
1990
2000
2025
Million
Met
ric
Ton
s
20406080
100120140160
Capture
(Grainger 1998)
1) Aquaculture is a vital aspect of the food-production industry
2) Global human population is expected to rise to over 9 billion by 2050
3) Placing tremendous pressure on food-production systems
Invasive species• With the increase in ease of travel and shipping,
one of the greatest threats by humans is the introduction of invasive species.
• San Francisco Bay (example)• 1850 – 1970 : new species established every 36 weeks
• 1970-1996: new species every 24 weeks• 1996-present: new species every 12 weeks.
Release of Ballast water
Invasive species
Zebra MusselUS and UK
Asian ClamSan Francisco Coqui frog
Hawaii
Brow Tree Snake Guam
RabbitsAustralia
Africanized HoneybeeSouth America
Tropical Rainforests Facts• Contains more than half
of the 5 to 80 million species of plants and animals worldwide.
• Approximately 1/3 of the world’s bird species are found in South American Rainforests.
Tropical Rainforests Facts
• Each year approximately 78 million acres of rainforest are destroyed.
• As many as 137 species are going extinct each day.
• The substrate (soil) is poor with most of the nutrients existing in the trees and plants.
Tropical Rainforest Facts
• Poor soil leads to burning the land to increase top-soil nutrients.
• Burning trees releases carbon into the atmosphere which exacerbates the greenhouse effect and increases temperature.
Tropical Rainforest and Population Growth
• Today, more than 3 billion people live in the tropics alone; more than lived in the entire world in 1950.
• Millions of people are destroying the rainforest simply to survive.
• These people, usually small farmers, have nowhere to grow crops to feed their families, so they wander into the rainforest.
Rainforest and Primates• In Ghana and parts of the
Ivory Coast, the Miss Waldron’s Red Colobus monkey is now extinct.
• “Chimpanzees lived in what was Africa’s great equatorial forest belt, but it’s not belt anymore just pockets of shrinking forest areas…If things carry on at the present rate in 15 years there will be very, very few chimpanzees left.” Jane Goodall
http://www.audubon.org/campaign/population_habitat/
Conclusion
• Humans require a great deal of resources and space and have not had a record of sharing.
• The earth is losing biodiversity at a rate not seen since the mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
• Our increasing numbers will certainly increase the rate at which animals and plants are lost.
Conclusion
• "For if one link in nature's chain might be lost, another might be lost, until the whole of things will vanish by piecemeal."- Thomas Jefferson
But why is biodiversity important?
Total Value of Ecosystem
Identifying a protected area's goods and services, determining who values those goods and services,
and measuring these values is not always a straightforward process. The goods and services include recreation and tourism, plant and wildlife
habitat, genetic resources, water supply, protection against natural disasters, and so on. Many of these goods and services are not traded on commercial
markets and therefore have no evident market value. The values of non-market goods and services need to
be measured and expressed in monetary terms, where possible, so that they can be weighed on the
same scale as commercially traded components.
The concept of total economic value (TEV) is now a well-established and useful framework for identifying the
various values associated with protected areas. The total economic value of a
protected area consists of its use values and non-use values.
Barbier 1997
Total Economic Values
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