Conservation of BIODIVERSITY

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Conservation of BIODIVERSITY

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Conservation of BIODIVERSITY Biodiversity can be assessed and conserved at several levels: Molecular/Genetic (rare genes and alleles) Population – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conservation of BIODIVERSITY


1
Conservation of BIODIVERSITY
  • Biodiversity can be assessed and conserved at
    several levels
  • Molecular/Genetic (rare genes and alleles)
  • Population
  • Species
  • Assemblage
  • Ecosystem
  • Global

2
BIODIVERSITY
  • Molecular/genetic is the level at which natural
    selection and evolution occurs
  • Loss of genetic diversity impedes adaptability
  • Loss of populations similarly handicaps a
    species chance of surviving uncertain
    circumstances in the future.

3
Loss of Biodiversity
  • Many reasons, often confounded
  • Historic extinctions
  • p/t extinction (250 mya)
  • k/t extinction (65 mya)
  • Holocene extinctions 10,000 years ago to present

4
EXTINCTION
  • Given evolutionary turnover, extinction is
    inevitable. Like death for the individual,
    nothing is more certain in the future of a
    species than its ultimate removal.
  • P. Martin and R. G.Klein IN
  • Quarternary Extinctions
  • A Prehistoric Revolution 1984

5
Current Extinctions
  • Current biodiversity crisis
  • Human mediated
  • Correlated with Homo sapiens expanding range and
    density
  • Ever-quickening rate of extinctions
  • Has led to increase of 1000 10,000 above the
    rate of background extinctions

6
Current Extinctions
  • Current biodiversity crisis
  • Before 1800
  • Islands many unique island assemblages decimated
  • Gigantic flightless birds
  • Gigantic tortoises
  • Dwarf elephants/hippos
  • Continents severe extinctions among megafauna
  • North american mammals
  • South american marsupials

7
Current Extinctions
  • After 1800
  • Extinctions on islands continue
  • Birds, endemic mammals, reptiles
  • Extinctions among smaller continental fauna
    increase in pace
  • Habitat destruction/conversion
  • Unregulated trade
  • Bounties on undesirable species

8
Conservation of Herpetofauna
  • Amphibians and reptiles face many of the same
    threats that face other non-human organisms
  • Habitat modification and destruction
  • Introduction of exotic species
  • Pollution
  • Commercial exploitation
  • Traditional and modern medicine
  • Pets
  • Research and teaching
  • Traffic mortality
  • Persecution

9
Habitat modification and destruction
  • The most significant problem
  • Absolutely correlated with increasing human
    population size
  • Extensive and worldwide all biomes, but tropical
    rainforests hit hardest
  • At the current rate of deforestation, within 30
    years there will remain neither extensive
    tropical forests, nor their endemic amphibian and
    reptile fauna
  • from Pough et al. 2001

10
1) Habitat destruction
  1. Deforestation of tropical forests
  2. Destruction of coral reef ecosystems
  3. Wetland alteration for development
  4. Temperate regions altered for agriculture
  5. Habitat fragmentation

11
Habitat modification and destruction
  • gt95 of central Californias marshes were drained
    and converted before 1900.
  • Rana aurora draytonii (California red-legged
    frog), once Californias most common frog, all
    but disappeared
  • Thamnophis gigas (giant garter snake), slowly
    declined, now almost extinct

12
Habitat destruction
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15
Habitat modification and destruction
  • In Florida, habitat conversion may have been
    responsible for a decline in Ambystoma cingulatum
  • 200-300 per night between 1970-1972
  • lt1 per night after habitat conversion in
    1990-1992
  • Anniella pulchra declines correlated with
    introduced plant spp.

16
Habitat modification and destruction
  • Often works in tandem with weedy or introduced
    species
  • In Arizona, alteration of hydrologic regime
    enables crayfish, game fish and bullfrogs to
    persist where they otherwise couldnt
  • Argentine ants expanding range into U.S. deserts
    by utilizing lawns and other landscaping
    features. Decline in Phrynosoma coronatum and P.
    cornutum correlated with spread of fire ants

17
Habitat Fragmentation
18
Introduced species
  • Declines (and extinctions) in many island species
    attributable to introduced exotics
  • Dogs and cats Cyclura carinata in Caicos Islands
  • Cats Brachylophus iguanas in the South Pacific
  • Goats Crotalus unicolor on Aruba Island
  • Sheep, goats, rats Sphenodon in New Zealand
  • Introduced fish in Californias high elevation
    lakes Rana muscosa and Thamnophis spp.
  • Fire ants impacting Texas horned lizard (P.
    cornutum) and Coast horned lizard (P. coronutum)
  • Small Indian Mongoose 7 species of reptile and
    amphibian from Puerto Rico

19
Introduced Species Herps
  • Bullfrog western U.S, C. and S. America,
    England, France, Asia, many other places
  • Boiga irregularis Guam
  • Wiping out geckos and skinks (all birds, bats,
    many small mammals already gone)
  • Introduced herp assemblages at ports-of-call

20
Introduced Herps by State (Simberloff et al.
1996)
21
Pollution
  • Acid rain
  • Ambystoma tigrinum in the Rocky Mountains
  • Bufo calamita in Britain
  • Selenium/agriculture runoff
  • Thamnophis gigas in Californias Central Valley
  • Pesticide wafting Rana and Bufo spp. in the
    Sierra Nevada

22
Pollution
  • Solid Waste marine turtles
  • PCBs effect endocrine systems of aquatic frogs
    and turtles
  • Acidic runoff from mines Rana tarahumarae in
    Arizona

23
Pollution
  • Biomagnification
  • The increase in the concentration of
    bioaccumulated toxic chemicals in organisms
    higher on the food chain due to preferential
    storage of the toxic chemical in edible body
    parts
  • There is abundant evidence that some carnivores
    at the ends of longer food chains (crocodiles,
    alligators, snakes) suffered serious declines in
    fecundity and hence in population size because of
    this phenomenon

24
Anthropogenic eutrophication
Directly Impacts aquatic turtle, alligator, snake
populations
  • Nutrients released, triggering chain of events

25
Over-harvesting
26
Commercial collecting Food
  • Frogs U.S., Europe, SE Aisa, Africa
  • Late 1800s extreme decline in availability of
    California red-legged frogs partially
    attributable to collecting pressure
  • 1976- 2.5 million KG frog legs imported into U.S.
  • Annual consumption in France 2.7-3.6 million KG
    frog legs

27
Commercial collecting Food
  • Declines in Iguana iguana and Ctenosaura similis
  • Monitors, pythons, tortoises, sea turtles

28
Commercial collecting SE Asian Turtle Crisis
  • 12 million turtles sold per year in Chinas food
    markets
  • Chinas and Vietnams turtle populations
    depleted now imported from all around the world,
    including the U.S.
  • Many of Chinas turtles were only known from the
    food markets no natural history or distribution
    information available
  • Many of those turtles have not been seen in
    markets for years

29
Commercial collecting SE Asian Turtle Crisis
  • Low reproductive rate combined with great
    importance placed on age of turtle has dire
    consequences for natural populations

30
The bycatch problem
31
Commercial exploitation for skins
  • Civil war Thousands of American alligators
    killed for skins
  • Legal importation of 304,189 pairs of Boa
    constrictor boots and 176,204 pairs of Python
    reticulatus into U.S in 1981 (all harvested from
    the wild)
  • gt1 million crocodile skins per year from 1980 to
    1985
  • gt12 million tegu skins during same period

32
Commercial exploitation for skins
  • Most species harvested for skins are long-lived
  • Until recently all have been harvested from the
    wild
  • Some progress being made to establish farms for
    commercially important species
  • The vast majority of skins are still collected
    from wild animals

33
Traditional and Modern Medicine
  • Bufo alvarius and Phyllomedusa bicolor used in
    shamanistic rituals
  • Snake venom used in antivenin and anticoagulant
    drugs
  • Batrachotoxin used in research to probe for
    voltage-sensitive sodium channels
  • Rattlesnake shaker muscle used in physiology
    studies

34
Pets
  • In Florida, 119,831 herps removed from the wild
    between 1990-1992
  • 74,000 box turtles exported as pets between
    1992-1994
  • Habitat destruction often accompanies collecting
    for pets
  • Very little record kept regarding s of animals
    collected as pets from the wild

35
Pet trade
  • In the United States, the retail trade in live
    reptiles, amphibians, and related products is
    worth a minimum of two billion dollars annually
    -Joseph Franke MS and Teresa Telecky
  • If you wish a reptile as pet make sure you are
    dealing with dealer that can be trusted. Find out
    where the animals come from

36
Research
  • For scientific collections usually very small
    impact
  • For bio and medical training
  • In early 1970s 15 million leopard frogs
    collected from the wild
  • 1970-1971 10 tons of leopard frogs collected
    from one western state
  • 250 lbs collected 4 years later

37
Traffic Mortality Roadkill!
Increases mortality of individuals and also
decreases gene flow
38
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39
Matthew Aresco, a 4th year PhD student in the
Department of Biological Science at Florida State
University built a temporary fence to divert
turtles (and other wildlife, gt 41 species) away
from the road and into a culvert that joined the
two lakes. Over the past 2.5 years he has
monitored the temporary fence at least twice per
day and maintained it at his personal expense (at
least 2000 out-of-pocket). Species such as
frogs, snapping turtles, large softshell turtles,
alligators, and most mammals can climb over this
low fence. The fence only covers 2000' - 3000' of
the "killing zone".
40
Permanent guidewall and culvert system recently
constructed at Paynes Prairie on US Highway 441
south of Gainesville, Florida. 
41
Persecution
http//www.rattlesnakeroundup.com/index.html
42
Rattlesnake Roundups
  • Occur in several southeastern states
  • Run by either non-profit Jaycees clubs or
    for-profit companies
  • 5 Crotalus spp. are targets other harmless
    snakes taken incidentally
  • Collecting methods often unethical

43
Rattlesnake Roundups
  • Snakes often stockpiled by collectors for long
    periods of time
  • At roundup, measured, weighed, poked fun at,
    submitted to stresses and injuries
  • Often skinned alive, in public

44
Rattlesnake Roundups
  • Justified as a way to educate the public
  • Also, to collect venom for research/antivenin
    industry
  • Claims that theres no effect, or a beneficial
    effect, on native populations
  • However, effects of roundups on wild populations
    largely undocumented

45
Rattlesnake roundups
  • The only organized events in the U.S. in which
    profits are made off the unregulated harvest of a
    vertebrate group
  • WHY?

46
Declining Amphibians-History
  • In 1989, at an international herp conference,
    workers expressed concern that their study
    organisms werent as common as they once were

47
Declining Amphibians-
  • Species extinctions and population declines
    around the world prior to 1990
  • Subsequent studies have documented declines as
    they happen
  • Few patterns emerged, other than that the most
    precipitous declines were among Anurans

48
Declining Amphibians-
  • Many of the same causes found for other
    biodiversity losses
  • Habitat loss
  • Pollution, acid rain
  • Exotic species
  • Collecting

49
Amphibian DeclineWhats happening to all the
frogs?
50
http//www.amphibiaweb.org/aw/declines/extinct.htm
ldeclines
51
Evidence of a complex problem
52
Two specimens of deformed frogs (Rana pipiens)
from Vermont with missing parts of their hind
limbs
Deformed Pacific Treefrog, Hyla regilla, from
Oregon, with supernumerary hind limbs
53
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54
Whats causing these Deformities/Declines?
55
1) predation and/or cannibalism?
predation and/or cannibalism, whereby some
predator (even other tadpoles) may be nipping the
limbs off of  tadpoles 
56
2) CHEMICAL POLLUTANTS?
  • Retinoic Acid
  • Main effects of RA on amphibian limbs-
  • Methoprene?
  • Atrazine
  • Diazinon
  • Suppresses cholinesterase (nervous system)

57
Hayes found hermaphroditism in frogs at levels as
low as 0.1 ppb. Even with today's limits, levels
of 40 ppb atrazine have been measured in rain and
spring water in parts of the Midwest, while
atrazine in agricultural runoff can be present at
several parts per million.
58
3) Parasites?
Ribeiroia cercariae
  • http//www.jcu.edu.au/school/phtm/PHTM/frogs/ampdi
    s.htm
  • Ribeiroia ondatrae (trematodes)

59
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60
Johnson et al. exposed tadpole Pacific tree frog
(Hyla regilla) to the cercaria of a trematode
parasite, Ribeiroia. They found that as the
number of parasites per tadpoles rises, the
percentage of abnormalities increases while
survival decreases.
http//news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/961.ht
ml
61
Parasites cont.
  • Spirometra erinacei (tapeworm)

62
Pathogens?
  • Chytrid Fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis)
  • Mucor amphibiorum
  • Infected frogs and toads have fungi disseminated
    through their internal organs and skin

63
Infected frogs may
  • have discoloured skin
  • be sloughing, or peeling, on the outside layers
    of its skin. This can vary from obvious peeling
    of skin (particularly on the feet), to a
    roughness of the frog's skin that you can barely
    see
  • sit out in the open, not protecting itself by
    hiding

64
4) Climate Change?
  • Increase in temperature seems to be impacting
    amphibian populations

65
5) Habitat Loss
66
7) Exotic species
  • Bullfrog

67
UV Radiation
  • UVB Radiation?
  • Blaustein vs Adams and Corn

68
Laws and Regulations CITES
  • Convention on International Trade in Endangered
    Species of Wild Fauna and Flora established by
    IUCN in 1973
  • Regulates international trade in species of
    concern
  • Mandates that international trade in endangered
    species is unlawful
  • Nearly 600 species of amphibian and reptile are
    covered

69
Laws and Regulations ESA
  • Signed into law by Nixon in 1973
  • Far-reaching law protects both domestic and
    foreign animals and plants
  • Prohibits take of species of concern
  • Mandates that FWS and NMFS monitor populations
    and develop a recovery strategy

70
Laws and Regulations ESA listing process
  • Anyone can petition to list a species
  • Must provide sound scientific basis for listing
  • FWS or NMFS reviews petition, may conduct
    additional research, must make findings according
    to predetermined time schedule
  • Decision to list or not published in Federal
    Register, including basis for decision

71
Laws and Regulations ESA recovery process
  • FWS or NMFS drafts a Recovery Plan for the
    species in question
  • Delineates tasks and criteria needed for the
    recovery of a species
  • Solicits public and expert comment on draft
    Recovery Plan
  • Revises draft, issues final recovery plan
  • Includes dollar estimates needed for recovery
  • Not a binding document
  • Species is delisted or downlisted as criteria
    from Recovery Plan are met
  • Critical habitat may be designated later

72
ESA Herp Listing Status
73
ESA Insular and Continental Amphibians and
Reptiles
74
ESA Listed Amphibians by State
75
ESA Listed Reptiles by State
76
ESA Herps with Recovery Plans
77
ESA Herps with Critical Habitat
78
ESA U. S. Listings of Herps by Year
79
ESA Listed Amphibians and Reptiles by Group
80
of ESA Listed Species by Group
81
Human Population Density ESA Listed Herps
82
American alligatoran ESA success story
  • American alligator was listed as threatened under
    precursuer to ESA in 1967.
  • All subsequent take was illegal
  • Captive breeding and farming ranches
    proliferated
  • Eggs collected in wild, incubated, then released
    when hatched
  • Alligator recovered, delisted in 1987
  • Now subject of 60 million / year industry

83
State laws and herps
  • Usually protected by state game and fish agency
  • Funding through sales of fishing and hunting
    licenses (P-R act and D-J act, respectively)
  • Often need fishing or hunting license to collect
  • Often may not collect for sale
  • Bag limits, quotas imposed
  • States may have ESA-type legislation

84
What can I do?
  • Adopt a conservation ethic
  • Work directly in the area of conservation
  • Help conduct research
  • Assist with conservation organizations
  • Become involved politically
  • Educate yourself, family friends about the
    importance of herps in the ecosystem
  • Educate yourself, family friends about the
    importance of having better green life choices
  • Try to have a lifestyle that incorporates
    sustainable methods
  • Support companies that work towards
    sustainability are supportive of the
    environment
  • Elect officials that support environmental
    policies

85
Conservation Groups
  • Conservation International
  • The Wildlife Society
  • Society for Conservation Biology
  • The Wilderness Society
  • Center for Biological Diversity

86
Conservation Journals
  • Conservation Biology
  • Biological Conservation
  • Southwest Naturalist
  • Journal of Wildlife Management, Wildlife Society
    Bulletin
  • Chelonian Conservation and Biology

87
When it comes to conservation and all the things
of your life keep in mind these words I am only
one, but I am one. I cannot do everything, but I
can do Something. I will not let what I cannot do
interfere with what I can do. Edward Everett
Hale
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