problem solving workshop 2 (lecture 13) Flashcards
Key terms:
- diagnose
- action plan
- conservation status
diagnose
- research programme
action plan
- conservation programme
conservation status
- is it threatened?
- i.e IUCN red list status
- botanical survey
- uplands of an oceanic island
- lowlands lost all natural vegetation
- natural habitat patches remain in upland
- a few individuals of an annual plant species new to science in a patch close to summit
describe and justify a plan to:
- diagnose threats to its survival
- conserve the species
WHAT ARE THE POSSIBLE THREATS?
- habitat loss
- habitat fragmentation
- habita degradation
- climate change
- small population paradigm: stochastic, environmental and demographic events, inbreeding
- invasive species: competing plants & grazers, including livestock
- botanical survey
- uplands of an oceanic island
- lowlands lost all natural vegetation
- natural habitat patches remain in upland
- a few individuals of an annual plant species new to science in a patch close to summit
describe and justify a plan to:
- diagnose threats to its survival
- conserve the species
WHAT WOULD YOU DO TO DIAGNOSE THE THREATS?
Habitat loss:
- random stratified survey to see which habitat types the species occurs in and variations in density e.g. using quadrats
- interview local people to see if they know of the species occurring at lower habitats or other habitat types
- maps or remote sensing to detect loss of habitat
Habitat fragmentation:
- random stratified survey to see how population densities/reproductive success vary across patches of different sizes
Habitat degradation:
- grazing: densities and seed set in areas with different grazing pressures. removal experiment to see effect
- invasive plant species: densities in areas with & without invasive species. again, removal experiment
- removal experiments link to conservation plan
Invasive species, competing plants, grazers, livestock:
- random stratified survey to see how population densities/reproductive success vary with presence of invasive species, competitors and grazers
Climate change:
- experimentally warm up patches to observe species responses: seed germination, flower production, pollination success (including trophic mismatch)
- bioclimatic envelope modelling - but need to consider
possible recent historical distribution at lower elevations
Small population size:
- study to look at allee effects and pollination
- genetic analysis of genetic diversity
- botanical survey
- uplands of an oceanic island
- lowlands lost all natural vegetation
- natural habitat patches remain in upland
- a few individuals of an annual plant species new to science in a patch close to summit
describe and justify a plan to:
- diagnose threats to its survival
- conserve the species
WHAT WOULD CONSERVATION ACTION WOULD YOU TAKE?
- look for species on nearby islands
- take seeds to establish captive population, check
for seed bank and encourage its regermination - restrict habitat loss within patches containing
species (discuss voluntary & legal restrictions) - consider alternative incomes for locals, such as
ecotourism - other specific actions depend on threat diagnosis
- species-recovery curve: diagnosis, solution testing, deployment of solution, sustainable management