EQ3 Flashcards

1
Q

Define sustainable yield?

A

The ‘safe’ level of harvest that can be harvested/caught/utilised without harming the individual ecosystem.

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2
Q

What is MSY (maximum sustainable yield)?

A

The greatest harvest that can be taken indefinitely while leaving the ecosystem intact.

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3
Q

What is OSY (optimum sustainable yield)?

A

The best compromise achievable in the light of all the social and economic considerations.

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4
Q

Define carrying capacity.

A

Maximum human population that can exist in equilibrium with the available resources. It can vary seasonally.

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5
Q

Define overshoot.

A

When a population consumption exceeds the carrying capacity of its environment.

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6
Q

What is the ‘zone of overharvest’?

A

Taking too much from an ecosystem - unsustainable.

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7
Q

Who are the key players?

A
Scientists & researchers
International Organisations
NGOs
Local/regional gov.
Artists/poets
National gov.
TNCs
Local communities - farmers, indigenous
Individuals
Consumers
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8
Q

Who are the global players and what do they do?

A

RAMSAR convention (conserve wetlands, 147 countries)
World Heritage Convention (protects cultural & natural sites, 180 countries, 1971)
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species CITES (control trade, 166 countries, 1973)
Convention on Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (prevent shooting of birds in passage, 1979, 90 countries)
UN Convention on the Law of the Sea UNCLOS (149 countries)
TNCs
World Bank
WTO
International Tropical Timber Organisation ITTO
NGOs (WWF, Greenpeace International)

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9
Q

What role do TNCs have?

A

Invest in renewable energy projects and exploitation
Drive innovation & tech, with both positive and negative effects
Favour green strategies to improve public image
Control which goods and services used and sold

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10
Q

What do the ITTO do?

A

Have mechanisms for forest conservation
Many top schemes so controversial
Local needs in developing countries not met

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11
Q

What does the WWF do?

A

Stop degradation of natural environ. & build a future where people live in harmony with nature

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12
Q

What does Greenpeace International do?

A

Stop illegal whaling
Capture public attention by taking direct action of conservation issues
Wide media coverage of lobby governments

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13
Q

What national responsibilities and players are there?

A

Government

  • regulation (establish/enforce laws to conserve genetic biodiversity)
  • protect areas/species
  • regulate polluting agrochemicals and releasing invasive species
  • Fund preservation/conservation development (taxes and subsidies)
  • Provide incentives to conserve (pay farmers to be stewards of landscape & farms in environmentally friendly way)
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14
Q

What local responsibilities and players are there?

A
  • Indigenous want biodiversity for basic survival
  • Local farmers have strong views about conservation as conflicts with their subsistence farming
  • Come together creating conservation crusaders
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15
Q

What individual responsibilities and players are there?

A
  • Food, fuel, water & shelter demands
  • ethical consumerism
  • ecosystems (spiritual renewal, recreation)
  • tourism (Galapagos)
  • form specialist groups (divers, bird watchers, mountaineers)
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16
Q

What are the possible strategies & policies on a scale from total protection to total exploitation?

A
(TOTAL PROTECTION)
Scientific reserve
Wildlife reserves & parks
Community wildlife management
Extractive reserves
Economic development integrated into conservation
Tolerant forest management
Exploitation with token protection
(TOTAL EXPLOITATION)
17
Q

What does total protection involve?

A
  • narrowly focused for scientific purposes but conservation is also influenced by social, economic, cultural and political factors
  • based on political & administrative boundaries but ecosystems natural borders are ignored
  • rely on youth outside agencies & local needs ignored
  • conflict between conservation & cutting people out
18
Q

What do biosphere reserves involve?

A
  • attention to design & distribution of reserves
  • conservation should target hotspots as there is high biodiversity and endemism to protect
  • focused on developing countries as lower cost so greater value for money
  • more fudning for high profile species (whales, tigers, panda as they attract more interest
19
Q

What does restoration involve?

A
  • recreate wetlands
  • restore derelict mines/quarriers/spoil heaps (but this is expensive as it is from scratch)
  • expense/ease depends on how readily plants will reseed & the level of pollution
20
Q

What are the types of conservation and give examples.

A
In situ (wildlife reserve)
Ex situ (botanic gardens, captive breeding, seed banks)
21
Q

What the positives and negatives of captive breeding?

A

Used to educate people and buys time

But releasing back into the environ. can be difficult

22
Q

What are the problems with the future of biodiversity?

A
  • only 12% of surface is protected and less than 1% of marine areas are protected
  • protected areas are fragmented and unevenly distributed
  • funding is short for conservation and protection in developing
  • effective conservation is not being carried out and is not successful
  • protecting remote area against illegal human activity (poaching, harvesting) is not effective
  • Biodiversity is not protected and is threatened (CC, pollution, alien species, unsustainable development)
23
Q

What is the MEA?

A

Millenium Ecosystems Assessment

24
Q

What are the 4 MEA scenarios?

A

1) Global Orchestration (connected but only reactive)
2) Order from Strength (not connected and only reactive)
3) Adapting Mosaic (proactive but not connective)
4) Techno Garden (proactive and connected)

25
Q

What does Global Orchestration involve?

A
  • connected but only reactive
  • interconnected society
  • focus on global trade and economic liberalisation
  • low pop. growth
26
Q

What does Order from Strength involve?

A
  • not connected and only reactive
  • regionalised/fragmented world
  • focus on security & protection, regional markets
  • low economic growth
  • high pop. growth
27
Q

What does Adapting Mosaic involve?

A
  • proactive but not connective
  • local institutions strengthened
  • proactive approaches from societies
  • pop. growth is the same as order from strength (high)
  • low economic growth
  • many local ecosystem management schemes
28
Q

What does Techno Garden involve?

A
  • proactive and connected
  • interconnected globe
  • focus on environ. sound tech.
  • engineered, highly managed services
  • relatively high economic growth
  • mid-range pop. growth
29
Q

What does the rate of population and economic growth in the MEA’s scenarios depend on?

A

Population
Consumption
Wealth changes

30
Q

Define overshoot/ecological deficit?

A

amount by which EFP exceeds biological capacity of the space available to that population

31
Q

What are the 4 WWF scenarios and what do they involve?

A

1) Business as usual (increased EFP, No reduction in overshoot)
2) Slow shift (develop many sustainable policies so EFP gradually reduces & we recover by 2100)
3) Rapid reduction (radical policies, elimination of overshoot by 2040)
4) Shrink & share (separate into regions to share responsibility)

32
Q

What actions can we take to eliminate overshoot?

A

Reduce EFP

  • control human pop.
  • change consumption pattern
  • improve production systems so more efficient (energy)
33
Q

What ways can we eliminate overshoot?

A

Maintain/develop biological capacity

  • protect ecosystems
  • restore
  • manage