Lecture 24 Flashcards

1
Q

major threats to biodiversity

A
  • habitat destruction
  • overexploitation
  • invasive species
  • pollution
  • climate change

often have synergistic effects

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2
Q

what four things can result from environmental change?

A

acclimation, adaptation, range shifts or extinction

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3
Q

give 4 examples of changes to the environment due to humans

A
  • ice disappearing
  • forests cut down
  • primates sold as pets or bushmeat
  • mercury put in rivers
  • microplastics
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4
Q

effects of increasing atmospheric CO2 levels in the last century

A
  • human activities adding more CO2
  • intensifies greenhouse effect and causes global warming
  • global temperature has increased dramatically
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5
Q

how is climate changing other than temperature?

A
  • circulation patterns are changing: Hadley cells get stronger and therefore larger, causing desert belts shifting poleward beyond 30 degrees
  • extreme weather events becoming more frequent
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6
Q

what happens to organisms as the climate changes?

A

acclimatisation through phenotypic plasticity
adaptation to new conditions
range shift migration to suitable conditions
extirpation, which is global or local extinction

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7
Q

acclimation

A

Early or gradual exposure to environmental stress can reduce its negative impacts
- Porcelain crabs (Petrolisthes) acclimated
to cold temperatures function better at colder temperatures
- But acclimation to warm temperatures increases high-temperature tolerance only minimally

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8
Q

give an example of how climate change is more than just the direct effects of warming

A

Snowshoe hares (Lepus Americans) are white in winter and brown in summer
Coat colour is important for reducing predation, and white animals are conspicuous against a snowless background

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9
Q

Mills et Al.

A
  • studied snowshoe hares in western Montana over 3 consecutive winters
  • radio-collared hares and performed weekly measurements of coat colour and snow around each hair
  • wanted to determine whether there I sufficient, current plasticity in the initiation or rate of coat colour change to reduce mismatch and respond to changes in snow cover
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10
Q

Mills et Al. results

A
  • it is getting cooler later in the fall and warmer earlier in spring
  • in general, snow is arriving later and leaving earlier
  • there is little variation in fall coat change; there is more variation in spring coat change
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11
Q

so, will plasticity alone in coat colour change able to respond to changes in conditions?

A

No, there is not enough plasticity to avoid mismatches
- projections of future snow duration show there will be greater mismatch between snowshoe hare coat colour and its background

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12
Q

how is coat colour mismatch predicted to affect hare population growth?

A

predicted to slow it

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13
Q

so, will hares adapt?

A

open question; depends on the amount and type of genetic variation underlying the timing of coat colour change

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14
Q

range shifts

A
  • species moving polewards
  • also up mountains
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15
Q

give an example of an animal that can’t go up mountains

A

pikas; death zone at low altitude

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16
Q

the Great Basin

A

many small mountain ranges, green ‘sky islands’ in a matrix of desert

17
Q

are pikas threatened by climate change?

A

The elevational range of American pikas in the Great Basin is getting smaller
- Sites where pikas have gone locally extinct often had temperatures above 26°C, which can be lethal to pikas (if they cannot behaviourally thermoregulate)
- The American pika was under consideration to be listed as an endangered species in the US (but the US ultimately decided against it)
- On the other hand, American pika populations in the Rocky Mountains and elsewhere appear to be healthy
(Smith et al. 2020)
- In Canada, the Collared pika (which lives in the Yukon, Northwest Territories, and BC) is federally designed as a species of “Special Concern’

18
Q

example of landscapes defeating migrations

A

Pronghorns can run but not jump. Whole herds have been killed at fences in the winter

19
Q

is extinction reversible

A

no

20
Q

most extinction models ignore

A

many factors thought to be important in determining future extinction risks such as species interactions, dispersal differences, evolution