Lecture Twenty Two - Extinction Flashcards

1
Q

What is extinction and why does it occur?

A
  • Perhaps one of the most common of all naturalevolutionaryprocesses
  • Perhaps 99.9% of all species that have evolved over the last 3.5 billion years have undergone extinction
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2
Q

What is the spatial scale of extinction?

A

• Local extinction – a species population is
displaced from a habitat
• Regional extinction – e.g. loss of the thylacine from mainland Australia
• Global extinction – a species becomes extinct everywhere`

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3
Q

Why are extinction rates so difficult to estimate?

A
  • Species in popular groups (birds, mammals) = much better known.
  • Some groups very sparsely sampled, eg. deep sea benthos, fungi, nanoplankton.
  • Accurate estimates of species # are difficult for poorly known groups.
  • Extinction rates are extrapolations from well-known species.
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4
Q

Which species have existed when in the time scale?

A

Pleistocene: Large mammals & birds (includes human impact).
Cretaceous: reptiles (dinosaurs), many marine species.
Triassic: 35% animal families, many reptiles, marine molluscs.
Permian: 50% animal families, 95% marine species, trees, amphibians.
Devonian: 30% animal families Ordovician: 50% animal families

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5
Q

What are some human induced extinctions?

A
  1. 74-86% Megafauna (animals >44 kg ~ 100 lbs) - by prehistoric humans.
    Mammoths:
    • Causes of extinction complex
    • Probably due to combination of improved hunting techniques and ecosystem (steppe) collapse - as the climate warmed.
    • Last known mammoths lived in the Arctic 4000 yrs ago.
  2. Since 1600, 2.1% of the world’s mammal and 1.3% of bird species have become extinct.
  3. Current extinction rates 100-1000x greater than “natural” rates.
  4. Extinction rates for species other than mammals and birds are just rough guesses! e.g. 90% of large predatory fish have been lost from the world’s oceans.
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6
Q

What is the ‘sixth’ mass extinction?

A

The current rate of species extinction is so rapid that it can be compared the past episodes of natural mass extinction known from the Geological record.
• Among scientists, current rate of extinction ranked higher concerns re pollution, global warming, and loss of the ozone layer (American Museum of Natural History) .
• We may be losing 30,000+ species a year. This is much faster than at any time over the last 65 million years.

  • NOW - the 1st mass extinction event since the loss of dinosaurs at the start of the Tertiary and the 6th in the four-billion-year history of life.
  • Global extinction rate of vertebrate groups could be 15-20% over the next 100 years.
  • Up to 50% of species could be wiped out over the next century because of human activities.
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7
Q

What is the HIPPOC syndrome?

A
Human expansion leads to: 
Climate change 
Introductions of species (I).  
Mechanical habitat destruction (H). 
Pollution (P). 
Fishing (over exploitation_ (O). 

These all lead to altered ecosystems.

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8
Q

What are the main threats to biodiversity (causes of current extinctions).

A

• Habitat destruction and fragmentation
• Impacts of introduced species
• Overexploitation (overhunting, overfishing)
• Collecting (for sale, aquaria, private)
• For plants, grazing pressure, altered fire regimes
Most directly or indirectly attributable to growing human Population, increasing at ~ 90 x 106 pa.

HIPPOC effect.

Habitat degradation, destruction and fragmentation are probably the most important causes of extinction today

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9
Q

What is overfishing?

A

• large vertebrates and shellfish - first human
disturbance to coastal ecosystems.
• enormous decrease - biomass and abundance.
• coincided with European colonization of Americas and Pacific.
• started before impact of pollution, eutrophication, habitat destruction, species invasions, climate change

Marine fish - an unsustainable resource:
• 1950-1994: Change in global fisheries from long -lived high trophic level bottom fish to short- lived, low trophic level invertebrates and pelagic fish.
• Driven by changes in fish abundance.
• Implies major changes in marine food webs.
• Continuation of trends will lead to widespread collapse of fisheries.

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10
Q

Explain pollution.

A

Exponential increase in human population the root cause of other impacts and threats.

Key factor driving the extinction vortex:
– Loss of the genetic variation necessary to enable evolutionary responses to environmental change.
What characteristics are common to endangered species approaching extinction?
•Small habitat
•Limited diet
•Long-lived and few young
•Large sized critters ..?
•Commercial value

Extinction vortex:
Small population -> Inbreeding and genetic drift -> Loss of genetic variability -> Reduction of individual fitness and population adaptability -> Lower reproduction and higher mortality -> smaller population etc.

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