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Biodiversity

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Title: Biodiversity


1
  • Biodiversity What is it?
  • Definitions
  • Contraction of biological diversity
  • Fundamental unit species
  • What is a species??
  • A group of genetically similar organisms that
    interbreed naturally and freely to produce
    viable, fertile offspring, but do not share this
    behavior and outcome with individuals of other
    species
  • Problem Some people consider this definition to
    be inadequate. Why??
  • Some natural interbreeding between species
  • Not all species distinct and static hybrid
    swarms
  • Some exchange of DNA without interbreeding
  • Genetic polymorphism species flocks

2
  • Biodiversity What is it?
  • Definitions
  • Components
  • Term biodiversity often used incorrectly or
    incompletely
  • Not synonymous with species diversity
  • Encompasses three measures
  • Species Diversity
  • Species richness Total number of species
  • Often cited incorrectly as biodiversity
  • Evenness Proportions of species in a community
  • More difficult to determine (requires more
    complete survey)
  • Genetic Diversity Variety of genotypes
  • Ecosystem Diversity Variety of habitat types

3
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4
  • Biodiversity What is it?
  • Definitions
  • Components
  • Term biodiversity often used incorrectly or
    incompletely
  • Not synonymous with species diversity
  • Encompasses three measures
  • Species Diversity
  • Species richness Total number of species
  • Often cited incorrectly as biodiversity
  • Evenness Proportions of species in a community
  • More difficult to determine (requires more
    complete survey)
  • Genetic Diversity Variety of genotypes
  • Keystone Species
  • Ex Sea otters in kelp forests

5
  • Biodiversity Estimation
  • Estimates of Biodiversity
  • Described species 1.8 million
  • Insects gt 1,000,000 species
  • Plants gt 290,000 species
  • Probably an underestimate
  • Only 11,000 species of bacteria
  • Less conspicuous species studied less often
  • Estimates range from 3 100 million
  • Around 6200 new eukaryote species described each
    year
  • Recent estimate 8.75 million (Mora et al. 2011)
  • Still doesnt capture microbial diversity (could
    exceed all other diversity combined)
  • Biases
  • Splitting of taxa more common than lumping
  • Tendency to increase number of described species
  • Cryptic species

6
  • Biodiversity Estimation
  • Biodiversity Hotspots
  • Myers Up to 20 of the worlds plant species
    and more than 20 of the animal species are
    confined to 0.5 of the land surface
  • Biodiversity Hotspot Area with high degree of
  • Biodiversity
  • Endemism
  • Risk of habitat degradation/loss
  • Concept originally intended for tropical and
    subtropical areas
  • Endemism less prevalent in temperate and polar
    regions

7
  • Biodiversity Value
  • Value to Humans
  • Economic
  • Ex Lomborg 3-33 trillion annually
  • Biodiversity loss could lead to removal of
    species that benefit humans but arent currently
    known to do so
  • Ex Chapin et al. (2002) suggested increase in
    frequency of Lyme disease during 20th century may
    have been related to increase in abundance of
    tick-bearing mice (once controlled by food
    competition with passenger pigeons)
  • Species extinction reduces potential pool of
    species containing chemical compounds with
    pharmaceutical or industrial applications
  • Problem Benefits may not be obvious
  • Difficult to convince people that its important
    to preserve something with no immediately
    apparent value to them
  • Ex Economic value of viral resistance added to
    commercial strains of perennial corn through
    hybridization with teosinte (Mexican wild grass)
    is 230-300 million/year

8
  • Biodiversity Value
  • Ecosystem Value
  • Biodiversity can have large effects on ecosystem
    stability and productivity
  • Benefits of biodiversity
  • Productivity
  • Halving species richness reduces productivity by
    10-20 (Tilman)
  • Nutrient retention
  • Loss of nutrients through leaching is reduced
    when diversity is high
  • Ecosystem stability
  • Ex Higher diversity (unfertilized) plots of
    native plant species maintained more biomass
    during drought than lower diversity (fertilized)
    plots
  • Ex Higher diversity plots of native plant
    species had greater resistance to fungal
    diseases, reduced predation by herbivorous
    insects and reduced invasion by weeds

9
  • Biodiversity Value
  • Ecosystem Value
  • Considerations
  • Species richness vs. evenness
  • Simple species richness may be deceptive as an
    indicator of biodiversity and ecosystem stability
  • Evenness usually responds more rapidly to
    perturbation than richness and may have important
    ecosystem consequences
  • Richness is typical focus of studies and policy
    decisions
  • Importance of individual species
  • Charismatic megafauna What about non-charismatic
    species?
  • Different species affect ecosystems in different
    ways (keystone species vs. non-keystone species)
  • Ex Sea otters/Sea urchins/Kelp forests in
    eastern Pacific Ocean
  • Question How many species are required to
    maintain normal ecosystem function and
    stability?
  • No magic number
  • Losing one ant species in a tropical forest may
    have less immediate impact than losing one
    species of fungus that is crucial to nutrient
    cycling in the soil

10
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Nutrient Availability
  • Oligotrophic
  • Dominated by a few species able to survive on
    limited nutrients
  • Low diversity, Low biomass
  • Mesotrophic
  • Support greater numbers of species
  • Rapid colonizers held in check by nutrient
    limitation
  • Less aggressive species capable of surviving
  • High diversity, Medium biomass
  • Eutrophic
  • Dominated by a few species able to grow and/or
    colonize rapidly with abundant nutrients
  • Low diversity, High biomass

11
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Selective Mortality
  • Predation
  • Ex Birds with colorful plumage
  • Ex Sea urchins (sushi)
  • Species-specific diseases/pests
  • Ex Dutch elm disease
  • Ex Bark beetles

12
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Habitat Disturbance
  • Non-selective habitat disturbance has potential
    to increase diversity
  • Prevents competitive exclusion
  • Intermediate disturbance ? Maximum diversity

13
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Habitat Disturbance
  • Fire and fire-dependent species
  • Ex Peters Mountain Mallow (Iliamna corei)
  • Discovered in 1927 (50 plants)
  • Endemic to meadow in western Virginia
  • 1986 - Three plants remaining
  • Not setting seed
  • Listed as endangered
  • Research on seeds indicated importance of fire
  • Cracks hard seed coat, aiding germination
  • Removes competing vegetation
  • Had been suppressed in the area
  • Controlled burns in 1992 and 1993 led to
    appearance of 500 seedlings

14
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Habitat Fragmentation/Destruction
  • Most significant factor causing species loss
  • Smaller habitats support fewer species and
    smaller populations than large habitats
  • Population sizes tend to fluctuate more in
    smaller habitats than large habitats
  • Reduced population ? Lower genetic diversity
  • Behavior of territorial species changes in
    fragments
  • Fragments may not support self-sustaining
    populations

15
  • Mount Hood National Forest, Oregon
  • Patches due to timber removal

16
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Habitat Fragmentation/Destruction
  • Most significant factor causing species loss
  • Smaller habitats support fewer species and
    smaller populations than large habitats
  • Population sizes tend to fluctuate more in
    smaller habitats than large habitats
  • Reduced population ? Lower genetic diversity
  • Behavior of territorial species changes in
    fragments
  • Fragments may not support self-sustaining
    populations

17
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Exotic Species
  • Species invasions may profoundly affect
    ecosystems
  • Detrimental exotic species usually are
  • Superior competitors
  • Ex Argentine ants, starlings, zebra mussels
  • Effective predators
  • Ex Nile perch, mongeese

18
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Exotic Species
  • Zebra mussel
  • Competitor in Great Lakes and elsewhere
  • Transported from Europe in ballast water
  • Fouling organism
  • Restricts movement of water through intake pipes
  • Colonizes boat hulls, pier pilings, buoys, etc.
  • Fouls other organisms (clams, mussels)
  • Filter feeder removes larvae and particulate
    material
  • Outcompetes native shellfish species for food and
    space
  • Removes larvae from water

19
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20
  • Biodiversity Factors
  • Exotic Species
  • Mongoose
  • Predator in Hawaii
  • Introduced in 1883 to combat rat population
  • Prey on native birds
  • Lionfish
  • Venomous predator
  • Introduced in Caribbean/W Atlantic ca. early/mid
    1990s
  • Preys on 65 spp. of fishes
  • No natural predators

21
Nile perch Lake Victoria
Brown tree snake - Guam
Argentine ants - California
Caulerpa taxifolia - California
22
How might we justify a particular environmental
ethic?
  • 1. Anthropocentrism
  • 2. Moral extentionism
  • zoocentrism/sentientism/psychocentrism, and
    biocentrism
  • 3. Novel features or entirely new approach such
    as ecocentrism

23
Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965)Reverence for Life
  • A predecessor to later biocentric environmental
    ethics.
  • Life is good in itself, inspiring, and deserving
    of respect I am life which wills to live, in
    the midst of life which wills to live.
  • Schweitzers reverence for life can be
    interpreted as an attitude, moral virtue, or
    character traitenvironmental virtue ethics.
  • But Schweitzer seemed to regard reverence for
    life as reverence for life in and of itself, akin
    to an ethical norm or rule. This, however, leads
    to Schweitzers paradox.

24
On Being Morally Considerable (1978)Kenneth
Goodpaster
  • What makes something morally considerable?
  • Animal ethics people correctly argue that it is
    arbitrary to stop at something like rationality
    and that sentience is morally considerable
    because, in part, rationality presumes sentience.
  • But why stop at sentience?
  • Sentience presumes something more basic that
    something is alive.
  • Goodpaster To avoid arbitrary
    distinctions, we should
  • ground morality
    in a life criterion anything
  • alive is morally
    considerable.

25
Respect for Nature A Theory of Environmental
Ethics (1986)
  • Paul W. Taylor

26
Another Biocentric Environmental Ethic
  • Gary Varner
  • Varner develops a psycho-biological theory of
    individual welfare.

27
And Another Biocentric Environmental Ethic
  • Nicholas Agar
  • Agar develops a theory based on living things
    having bio-preferences.

28
And Still Another Biocentric Environmental Ethic
  • James Sterba uses liberal justice to ground a
    biocentric environmental ethic
  • An organism has a good of its own if it can be
    harmed or benefited.
  • If an organism has a good of its own, it is wrong
    to harm it unless we have a good reason for doing
    so.
  • There are no non-question-begging reasons to
    assume that human interests always override the
    good of a nonhuman organism.
  • An organism that has a good of its own has moral
    standing and is thus subject to the same
    fundamental principles of justice that govern
    human relationships.
  • Liberal justicea balancing of liberty and
    equalityis the most defensible principle of
    social justice to guide human-nonhuman
    relationships.
  • Sterba argues that species and ecosystems can
    also be said to have goods of their own.
    Sterbas EE thus bridges biocentrism and
    ecocentrism.

29
Aldo Leopolds Land Ethic
30
Ecocentrism
  • Ecocentrists believe that anthropocentrism,
    zoocentrism, and biocentrism are all inadequate
    because of their individualist focus.
  • From ecology We cannot fully understand an
    organism without also examining things such as
  • its species
  • its interaction within species populations
  • its relationship with ecosystem processes
  • what it eats
  • what eats it
  • etc.
  • Ecocentrism We cannot fully understand the
    value of an organism without also locating value
    in holistic entities, and probably also in
    processes and relationships.

31
Ecocentrism
  • The central feature of ecocentrism is its holism.
  • Three kinds of holism
  • Epistemological or methodological holism We
    cannot understand something or have knowledge of
    it without taking into account holistic entities,
    processes, and relationships.
  • Metaphysical holism Holistic entities really
    exist.
  • Ethical holism holistic entities (and probably
    processes and relationships as well) have
    noninstrumental value.

32
Three Problems for Ecocentrism
  1. Getting its ecology right
  2. Naturalistic fallacy Trying to derive values
    straight from facts, or prescriptive norms about
    what we should do straight from descriptive,
    factual statements
  3. Ecofascism

33
Animal Liberation A Triangular Affair (1980)
by J. Baird Callicott
  • Ethical Humanism
    (Anthropocentrism)
  • Humane Moralism
    Leopolds Land Ethic
  • (Animal Liberation)
    (Holistic Ecocentrism)

34
Callicotts Conclusions
  • Animal liberationists fail to make a distinction
    between domestic and wild animals, but this
    distinction is crucial.
  • From the perspective of Aldo Leopolds land
    ethic, many domestic animal species ruin nature.
  • Domestic animals have no natural behavior.
  • We cannot liberate animals back to the wild if
    left alone, many domesticated species might go
    extinct.
  • It is wrong to prevent pain (sentientism) because
    pain provides important information for nervous
    systems.
  • Animal liberation denies our natural
    participation in nature through activities such
    as hunting.

35
Animal Liberation versus the Land Ethic (1981)
by Edward Johnson
  • Johnson replies to Callicott
  • Animal liberation is directed toward individual
    animals that can be liberated there is no direct
    concern with species.
  • The sentientist point about pain is that
    pointless pain is morally wrong.
  • Natural participation with nature? Whats this?

36
Tom Regan pours fuel on the fire between animal
ethics and environmental ethics (1983)
  • The implications of Leopolds view include the
    clear prospect that the individual may be
    sacrificed for the greater biotic good, in the
    name of the integrity, stability, and beauty of
    the biotic community. It is difficult to see
    how the notion of the rights of the individual
    could find a home within a view thatmight be
    fairly dubbed environmental fascism. To use
    Leopolds telling phrase, man is only a member
    of the biotic team, and as such has the same
    moral standing as any other member of the
    team. If, to take an extreme, fanciful but, it
    is hoped, not unfair example, the situation we
    faced was either to kill a rare wildflower or a
    (plentiful) human being, and if the wildflower,
    as a team member, would contribute more to the
    integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic
    community than the human, then presumably we
    would not be doing wrong if we killed the human
    and saved the wildflower. (pp. 361-362 from The
    Case for Animal Rights, 1983, bold and underline
    added)

37
Animal Liberation and Environmental Ethics Bad
Marriage, Quick Divorce (1984)
  • Mark Sagoff
  • If animal liberationists such as Singer are
    committed to minimizing the suffering of animals,
    logically they should be committed to intervening
    in wild nature to lessen suffering. This could
    lead to many proposals and policies such as
    killing predators.
  • But these kinds of proposals and policies will
    strike an environmentalist as being absurd.
  • Thus, a holistic environmental ethic cannot stem
    from the interests of individual animals.

38
A Possible Utilitarian Response
  • Utilitarian intervention to minimize suffering in
    the lives of wild animals might damage
    ecosystems, resulting in a lower quality of life
    for animals in the wild (and possibly a lower
    quality of life for people).
  • Removal of animals from the wild to minimize
    suffering might likely lead to unhappier lives
    for the now captive animals.
  • Thus, leaving wild animals alone might be our
    best policy to minimize animal suffering. This
    could result in a habitat ethic that might be
    compatible with holistic environmental ethics.

39
A Possible Animal Rights Response
  • A wild animals right to life is a right not to
    be killed by moral agents (who have a duty to
    respect rights), but this doesnt imply a duty on
    the part of moral agents to protect the animal
    from being killed by non-moral agents such as
    other wild animals.
  • We should manage human wrongs and not wild
    animals.
  • Thus, respecting the rights of wild animals
    simply means letting them be, with as little
    human interference as possible.

40
Animal Liberation is an Environmental Ethic
(1998) by Dale Jamieson
  • Sentient humans and animals have primary value,
    while non-sentient entities have derivative
    value. But in some cases derivative value should
    trump primary value.
  • Animal liberation and environmental ethics can be
    likened to a Hollywood romance
  • 1. They can complement each otherthere are
    good animal
  • ethics and good environmental ethics reasons to
    not eat meat.
  • 2. We can value non-sentient nature
    intrinsically and intensely.
  • 3. An animal ethic can give us a habitat ethic
    that is
  • indistinguishable from a biocentric or
    ecocentric
  • environmental ethic
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