Chapter 56 Flashcards
Conservation biology integrates several fields:
- Ecology
- Physiology
- Molecular biology
- Genetics
- Evolutionary biology
Biodiversity has three main components:
- Genetic diversity
- Species diversity
- Ecosystem diversity
Genetic Diversity
Refers to genetic variation within a population and between populations
Species Diversity
The variety of species in an ecosystem or throughout the biosphere
Benefits of genetic and species diversity include:
- Agricultural crops with desired qualities (i.e. virus-resistant commercial rice)
- Prescription drugs can contain substances originally derived from plants (i.e. the rosy periwinkle has alkaloids that inhibit cancer growth)
Human activity is _ ecosystem diversity, the variety of ecosystems in the biosphere.
Reducing
More than 50% of _ in the contiguous United States have been drained and converted to other ecosystems.
Wetlands
The _ that was devastated by Katrina was a wetland that was filled in and made into subdivisions.
New Orleans 9th ward
The local extinction of one _ can have a negative impact on other species in an ecosystem.
Species
Flying foxes (bats) are important _ and _ in the Pacific Islands.
Pollinators; seed dispersers
Ecosystem Services
All the processes through which natural ecosystems and their species help sustain human life
Some examples of ecosystem services:
- Purification of air and water
- Detoxification and decomposition of wastes
- Cycling of nutrients
- Moderation of weather extremes
Most species loss can be traced to four major threats:
- Habitat loss
- Introduced (invasive species) - species that humans move from native locations to new geographic regions
- Overharvesting - human harvesting of wild plants or animals at rates exceeding the ability of populations of those species to rebound
- Global change - includes alterations in climate, acid precipitation, air pollution, etc.
Biologists focusing on conservation at the population and species levels follow two main approaches:
- The small-population approach
- The declining-population approach
Small-Population Approach
Studies processes the can make small populations become extinct; the key factor for this approach is the loss of genetic variation that allows a population to respond to environmental changes