Chapter 57 Conservation Flashcards
What is biodiversity
- the number of different and distinct species in a habitat
- variety of living organisms on earth
What are the benefits of biodiversity
- humans depend on them for food, building material, medicine,pain relievers, cancer treatments
- losing species can break down a community
What are biodiversity hotspots? Examples?
- large amount of biodiversity, they are inaccessible so we don’t live there
- provide resources for organisms living there, home/shelter, food,mates
Ex: tropical rainforests and coral reefs, islands, deep oceans
What is an endemic species?
- found only in one place
- ex: ring tail lemurs only live in Madagascar 🇲🇬
What is an indicator species?
- sensitive to environmental change
- are monitored to see environmental health, a decline in these species meals something is wrong with the ecosystem
- ex: crayfish
How do we negatively affect wildlife populations? Land pollution/trash
-trash goes into the seas, chemicals seep from buried trash that contaminated ground water, floating trash, animals become entangled in plastic
What is wildlife exploitation? Wildlife trade in animal parts and live animals for illegal pets? Who are the big three, soon to be four?
- over harvesting species from the wild that causes a drastic decline in populations
- delicacies, medicines/cures, trinkets, trophies, exotic pets, fur
- big 4: elephants, rhinos, tigers, lions
What are invasive species? What damage can they possibly cause?
- dispersed from their original home range by humans, they do well
- released pets, accidentally shipped to other areas, brought in as a solution but creates more problems
- numbers of the species in tease and natives get out competed and have no way to defend against them since they’ve never seen them before
- ex: Pythons in Florida
How does urbanization affect wild population?
- we make animals lose their habitats
- fragmentation: separates populations into small isolated populations
- this messes up migration routes, cause inbreeding and reduces genetic variation
What is the difference between background extinctions and mass extinctions?
- background: decline of reproductive fitness within a species due to changes in its environment. Not major events
- mass: death of 75% or more species in a geologically short period of time due to catastrophic events. Major events
What factors increase the risk of extinction?
Geographic range, pop size, habitat tolerance
What are the causes of our current mass extinction?
- caused by humans
- habitat degradation and loss: loss of tropical rainforests
What is conservation biology?
-preservation of habitats and ecosystems, preservation of individual species
How can economics be used for conservation?
-many oppose environmental protections
Ex: logging industry
-ecotourism is good, because people want to see animals so they are protected
Ex: Monteverde cloud festival in Costa roca
-eliminate profiting from poaching
-eliminate value in trinkets and remedies made from animals
-increase awareness and education in value of the environment and wildlife species
Geographic range
- animals are restricted to small habitat ranges are more likely to go extinct
- small bodies of water
- confined to islands
- small patches of unconnected habitat in urban developed areas
Ex: Tasmanian devil- lost its habitat and is now confined to a small island of Tasmania, developed facial tumor due to low genetic diversity and most share the same genes/recognition proteins