Habitat Degradation & Loss - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 68
About This Presentation
Title:

Habitat Degradation & Loss

Description:

Habitat Degradation & Loss Habitat Degradation Habitat degradation and loss is the most serious threat to the majority of endangered biodiversity The majority of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1241
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 69
Provided by: blueUtbEd9
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Habitat Degradation & Loss


1
Habitat Degradation Loss
2
Habitat Degradation
  • Habitat degradation and loss is the most serious
    threat to the majority of endangered biodiversity
  • The majority of the earths land surface (83)
    has been transformed by humans to some degree
  • About 60 of earths ecosystems are considered
    degraded or unsustainable

3
Habitat Degradation
  • Historic, current, and projected rates of habitat
    loss by type

4
Habitat Degradation
  • Marine systems also heavily impacted
  • E.g. gt20 coral reefs destroyed and 20 degraded
    35 of mangrove of mangroves destroyed in past 20
    yrs
  • 3-6x more water behind damns or in reservoirs
    relative to water in rivers

5
Habitat Degradation
  • Habitat degradation is the primary cause of
    extinction and endangerment globally (fig. 3.6)

6
Habitat Degradation
  • What is the point of knowing those specific
    factors causing the demise of a particular
    population and/or species?

7
Habitat Degradation or Loss?
  • Lots of factors can initiate habitat degradation
    and/or loss
  • Agriculture extraction

8
Habitat Degradation or Loss?
  • Lots of factors can initiate habitat degradation
    and/or loss
  • Development and pollution

9
Habitat Degradation or Loss?
  • What is the difference between degradation and
    loss?
  • Degradation generally refers to impacts that
    affect many, but not all, species and that may be
    temporary
  • Habitat loss usually refers to impacts so severe
    that all, or nearly all, species are adversely
    affected and will take a relatively long time to
    recover

10
Habitat Degradation or Loss?
  • Reduction (although not total loss) of taxonomic
    groups

11
Habitat Degradation or Loss?
  • Another form of degradation is habitat
    transformation
  • This is a result of one habitat being converted
    into another and fundamental processes change
    (e.g. forest in cropland)

12
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Throughout history we have been relatively
    aggressive in our modification of our surrounding
    landscape
  • These direct effects also have (had) many
    indirect effects as well
  • While transformations have been around for 1000s
    of years, mechanization has greatly increased
    both rate and intensity

13
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
14
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • We can use historical ecology to gain a better
    understanding of what our effects have been to
    date (read Case Study 6.1)
  • New tools (e.g. satellite imagery) can monitor
    change anywhere in the world relatively easily

15
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Forest systems
  • Over the past 300 yrs about 50 of the worlds
    forest cover has been removed
  • 25 countries totally deforested
  • 29 countries gt90 deforested
  • Between 1990 and 2000, the proportion of land
    area covered by forest ecreased form 30.4 to
    29.7
  • Much?

16
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • 1M km2
  • Africa alone lost 8 of forests in this single
    decade

17
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Development is frequently the causal agent
    (directly or indirectly)

Rural Ibaraki, Japan
18
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Tropical areas are currently being deforested at
    the highest rate (although temperate had a good
    run)
  • In the Amazon, up to 75 of all rainfall results
    from evapotranspiration
  • Consequently, deforestation can dramatically
    alter climate patterns can change regional
    landscapes

19
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Damage and loss to savannas
  • Grasslands, shrublands and savannas cover about
    40.5 of earths surface
  • These systems are maintained in herbaceous or
    shrub veg by drought, fire, freezing or grazing
  • Consequently, great for crops and livestock

20
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Damage and loss to savannas
  • Temperate grasslands have been the most heavily
    converted
  • In N Am, 97 of tallgrass prairie, 60 of mixed-
    and short-grass prairie converted since the
    mid-1800s

21
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Damage and loss to savannas
  • In the middle-east, Asia and northern AF,
    desertification has resulted from poor land
    management
  • Causes were a combination of climate change,
    conversion for agriculture, harvesting wood for
    fuel

22
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Degradation of freshwater systems
  • With agricultural and urban expansion, water
    systems are degraded through water diversions,
    dams, and extensive wetland losses
  • Presently, only 2 of US rivers run unimpeded
    (lt1/3 worldwide)
  • Water development contributes to endangerment for
    91 and 99 of US federally listed fish and
    mussels, respectively

23
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Degradation of freshwater systems
  • Efforts to increase agricultural productive have
    resulted in massive water withdrawls from lakes
    and aquifers

24
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Aral Sea has shrunk 40 in a decade

25
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Historical loss of wetlands

26
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Degradation of marine ecosystems
  • Almost 60 of worlds population lives within
    100km of a coast and as a result, 20 of
    ecosystems adjacent to the oceans have been
    highly modeifed
  • Much harder to appreciated what our impact has
    been on marine systems at a larger scale

27
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Degradation of marine ecosystems
  • Coastal estuaries have been highly damaged and/or
    lost
  • Dams and diversion have starved many estuaries
    and deltas of the nutrients and sediments that
    drive these foodwebs
  • Mangroves provide nursery and breeding grounds
    for fish and invertebrates, as well as buffer
    against coastal erosion

28
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Degradation of marine ecosystems
  • Other areas suffer from too much sedimentation or
    the wrong nutrients
  • E.g. seagrass beds have largely been destroyed
    through sedimentation
  • E.g. nitrogen pulses can create dead zones

29
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Agricultural activities, extraction and
    development are the 3 big drivers in habitat
    degradation
  • Also main causes of endangerment for birds and
    amphibians
  • Exotics are a growing problem

30
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Bird sp threatened by hab degradation

31
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Causes of Habitat Degradation (Ag)
  • Agricultural expansion has been the primary cause
    of ecosystem change
  • Acceleration due to mechanization
  • The Green Revolution expanded the intensity
    with which crops are grown
  • In 1700 265M ha to 1.2B ha in 1956
  • Now grow 0.3 annually

32
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Distribution of cultivated systems (gt30)

33
Patterns of Habitat Transformation
  • Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Other impacts of industrial farming include high
    irrigation, heavy pesticides, herbicides, and
    pesticides all of which negatively impact
    biodiversity

34
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Urbanization and Development
  • Cities are the extreme of habitat conversion with
    3 of earths surface
  • They also severely impact nearby aquatic
    environments
  • Ultimately their reach extends as they cannot
    provide all the resources they require in such a
    concentrated area

35
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Urbanization and Development
  • Urban expansion frequently comes from arable land
  • E.g. China, 5M ha of agriculture were converted
    to urbanization from 1987-92
  • Waste is high correlated with density
  • Coastal degradation is also highly correlated
    with urban density
  • E.g. altering hydrological flows, extraction

36
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • War and Violent Conflict
  • Obviously war can have long-lasting and severe
    impacts on the landscape
  • E.g. Vietnam and agent orange
  • Africa has had many problems and as people get
    forced to live in the bush where they need
    firewood and they eat animals or poach for others

37
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Pollution
  • Pollutants are particularly pervasive and can be
    found virtually everywhere
  • Direct destruction is obvious, accumulation can
    be just as problematic
  • Common forms of pollution include light
    pollution, waste disposal and release of
    synthetic chemicals

38
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Light Pollution
  • Extensive use of electric lights has greatly
    modified the nighttime landscape
  • Frogs can be temporarily blinded
  • Migrant birds can be severely disoriented
  • Beachfront lighting deters seaturtles

39
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Pollution

40
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Air Pollution and Acid Rain
  • More pollutants go into the air than into any
    other medium
  • Major sources include transportation, fuel
    combustion (power plants and large buildings),
    solid waste disposal, industrial processes, and
    burning of forests and ag fields

41
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Air Pollution and Acid Rain
  • Air pollution is negatively impacting of number
    of national forests
  • GSMNP gt30 plants directly damaged
  • GCNP visibility is a severe problem
  • Human health
  • Macro and micro (lt10µ) respiratory issues

42
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Air Pollution and Acid Rain
  • Acid deposition in water and land has caused
    problems worldwide
  • In eastern US and Canada, acid deposition is
    30-40x greater than 1980s
  • Primary source, sulfur dioxides
  • Acid rain can directly harm many species of
    plants sensitive to soil pH
  • In GSMNP, stream pH 5-10x greater

43
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Solid waste and Plastics
  • Improper waste disposal is particularly
    problematic for
  • Plastics and other nonbiodegradable items are
    quickly piling up
  • Plastics (especially bags and balloons) look like
    jellyfish or other food items
  • Fishery debris kills many marine mammals (e.g.
    Australia, 1500 fur seals)

oceans
44
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Marine life and Plastic

45
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Plastics
  • One of the real perils of plastic is that it is
    photodegradable breaking down into smaller and
    smaller pieces, but never disappearing
  • Can result in ingestion at lower trophic levels
    and subsequent bioaccumulation

46
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Chemical Pollution
  • Chemicals have provided us with many conveniences
  • However, we have very little idea whtat the
    long-term impact of most chemicals to the
    environment
  • There are acute (immediate) problems and chronic
    (e.g. altering development, compromise immune
    system)

47
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Chemical Pollution Nitrogen
  • One chemical humans have utilized that is not
    noxious is nitrogen
  • However, in an attempt to improve the
    productivity of systems, humans have dumped N all
    overhow?
  • Currently, approximately 2x the amount of N into
    the system as naturally occurs (but expected to
    increase another 2-3x)

48
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Chemical Pollution Increases in Nitrogen in the
    worlds watersheds

49
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Chemical Pollution Nitrogen
  • While N increases productivity, it can have
    undesired effects on ecosystem structure and
    function
  • May have direct (changes patterns of
    productivity) or indirect (changing patterns of
    herbivory) effects
  • In aquatic habitats, can be responsible for large
    algal booms

50
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Eutrophication
  • Taking a low nutrient system to a high nutrient
    system
  • Despite the initial spike in productivity,
    subsequent changes occur
  • Zooplankton feed on the increased phytoplankton
  • All the dead zooplankton and phytoplankton sink
    to the bottom and are decomposed

51
Causes of Habitat Degradation
  • Eutrophication
  • Landbased agricultural fertilizers are making
    their way into marine systems
  • Other areas will be impacted as these fertilizers
    grow in use
  • Untreated sewage is another source for eutrophic
    conditions

52
Causes of Habitat Degradation
53
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • There are many conservation groups that take a
    global approach to conservation issues (Nature
    Conservancy, WWF, Conservation International,
    Wildlife Conservation Society)
  • Problem usually what is most threatened is the
    most expensive to protect

54
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • Biodiversity Hotspots
  • hotspots were first proposed by Norman Myers
    based upon irreplaceability and threat (n10)
  • Expanded upon by those at CI and now represent 34
    regions of exceptional endemism and habitat loss
  • Each holds gt1500 endemic plants and has lost gt70
    of original habitat

55
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • Biodiversity Hotspots
  • The majority (22 of34) are tropical forests
  • Areas only consist of 15.7 of earths
    landsurface but contain gt77 of all vertebrate
    species
  • Over 300,000 plants (gt1/2 endemic to a single
    area) and 42 of vertebrates restricted to these
    34 regions

56
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
57
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • Biodiversity Hotspots
  • One positive outcome of such a strategy has been
    to draw attention (and resources) into these
    high-profile areas

58
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • Global 200 ecoregions
  • Another approach is the global 200 plan, which
    seeks to represent each of earths ecosystem on a
    global scale
  • These targets are based upon species richness,
    endemism, taxonomic uniqueness, global rarity and
    unusual ecological or evolutionary phenomena

59
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • Otherwise, some areas would be left-out

60
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • Crisis Ecoregions
  • The TNC and WWF completed their strategic
    analysis of the status of worlds ecoregions
  • Generated a conservation risk index based upon
    the ration of the percent of habitat converted to
    human uses to the percent of habitat protected

61
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • 3 levels critical (gt50 conversion, CRIgt25)
    endangered (gt40, CRIgt10), vulnerable (gt20,
    CRIgt2)

62
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
63
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • Crisis Ecoregions
  • There is broad overlap between the CRI and
    hotspots, as well as Global 200

64
Approaches to Global Habitat Conservation
  • Wilderness Protection
  • Another approach is to try and protect areas
    where the habitat is still largely intact
  • CI has also prioritized wilderness areas in
    tropical regions
  • This approach identifies the 10 of each biome
    that is least affected by human development

65
Conservation of Habitats the How
  • What we have just addressed highlights where to
    implement conservation actions, but is does not
    describe how
  • There are a number of factors (social and
    economic) underlying driving landuse change
    decisions
  • Consequently, how to implement a conservation
    strategy will depend upon what factors are
    momentarily driving it

66
Conservation of Habitats the How
  • The solution is often dependent upon spatial
    scale the effort is targeted
  • For example, some focus in the policy arena to
    establish natl parks, or to fund conservation
    through the purchase of development rights or
    debt-for-nature swaps (Essay 6.4)
  • E.g. U.S. govt (TNC, CI, WWF) Columbia 10M
    for 11M acres

67
Conservation of Habitats the How
  • In the US there are many tools by which
    conservation groups can get various landowners
    (state, federal, or private) to agree to aid
    conservation efforts (albeit for other
    reasons)more later

68
Conservation of Habitats the How
  • The Wildlands Project
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com