Title: Texas Natural Regions
1Texas Natural Regions
2Extinction Rates
- Background (natural) rate of extinction
Number of families of marine animals
3(No Transcript)
4Sustaining Wild Species
Brian Kaestner and Dr. Richard Clements Saint
Marys Hall and Chattanooga State Technical
Community College
5Why Should We Care About Biodiversity?
660
EUROPE
NORTH AMERICA
ASIA
30N
Tropic Of Cancer
Atlantic Ocean
AFRICA
Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean
150
90
60E
0
30W
90
120
150
0
SOUTH AMERICA
Indian Ocean
Tropic Of Capricorn
AUSTRALIA
30S
Antarctic Circle
60
ANTARCTICA
Critical and endangered
Threatened
Stable or intact
Projected Status of Biodiversity 19982018
7Human Impacts on Biodiversity
8Decreasing Biodiversity
- Large environmental disturbance
- Introduction of alien species
9Biome
of Area Disturbed
Temperate broadleaf forests
94
Temperate evergreen forests
94
Temperate grasslands
72
Mixed mountain systems
71
Tropical dry forests
70
Subtropical and temperate rain forests
67
Cold deserts and semidesert
55
Mixed island systems
53
Warm deserts and semideserts
44
Tropical humid forests
37
Tropical grasslands
26
Temperate Boreal forests
18
Tundra
0.7
10Increasing Biodiversity
- Physically diverse habitat
- Moderate environmental disturbance
11US Diversity
12U.S. Endangered Species s
13Texas Blind Salamander
14Species Extinction
15Endangered and Threatened Species
- Threatened (vulnerable) species
16Badger
Anemone
17Karner Blue
Hawaian Sea Turtle
18Ceratozamia
Whooping Crane
19Whooping Crane Flyway
20Pitcher Plant
21U.S. Endangered Species
22Characteristic
Examples
Low reproductive rate (K-strategist)
Blue whale, giant panda, rhinoceros
Specialized niche
Blue whale, giant panda, Everglades kite
Narrow distribution
Many island species, elephant seal, desert pupfish
Bengal tiger, bald eagle, grizzly bear
Feeds at high trophic level
Fixed migratory patterns
Blue whale, whooping crane, sea turtles
Rare
Many island species, African violet, some orchids
Commercially valuable
Snow leopard, tiger, elephant, rhinoceros, rare
plants and birds
Large territories
California condor, grizzly bear, Florida panther
23Range 100 years ago
Range today (about 2,300 left)
Indian Tiger
24Range in 1700
Range today (about 2,400 left)
Black Rhino
25Causes of Premature Extinction of Wild Species
- Introduction of non-native species
26Type of Nonnative Organism
Annual Losses and damages
Crop disease
23.5 billion
Crop weeds
23.5 billion
Rats
19 billion
Feral cats and outdoor pet cats
17 billion
Crop insects
14 billion
Livestock diseases
9 billion
Forest insects and diseases
4.8 billion
Zebra mussels
3 billion
Common pigeon
1.1 billion
Formosan termite
1.1 billion
Fishes
1.1 billion
Asian clam
1.1 billion
Feral pigs
0.8 billion
Starlings
0.8 billion
Fire ant
0.6 billion
27Kudzu Use
28Chestnut Blight Fungi
29Zebra Mussle
30Zebra Mussle map
31Expansion of the fire ant in southern states.
32Characteristics of Successful Invader Species
Characteristics of Ecosystems Vulnerable to
Invader Species
- High reproductive rate, short generation time
(r-selected species) - Pioneer species
- Long lived
- High dispersal rate
- Release growth- inhibiting chemicals into soil
- Generalists
- High genetic variability
- Similar climate to habitat of invader
- Absence of predators on invading species
- Early successional species
- Low diversity of native species
- Absence of fire
- Disturbed by human activities
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4
3
5
Top Six Hot Spots
6
1 Hawaii 2 San Francisco Bay area 3 Southern
Appalachians 4 Death Valley 5 Southern
California 6 Florida Panhandle
Concentration of rare species
1
Low
Moderate
High
34Wildlife Management
- Laws regulating hunting and fishing
- Population management plants
- Treaties and laws for migrating species
35Solutions Protecting Wild Species from
Depletion and Extinction
- International Treaties CITES
- National Laws Lacey Act Endangered Species Act
- Habitat conservation plans
- Wildlife refuges and protected areas
- Zoos, botanical gardens, and gene banks
36Strategies for Protecting Biodiversity