Habitat Loss Orange County, California
Dingo Fence – The World’s Longest – New South Wales
The Dingo – Canis familiarus dingo
Earth, Fire, and Water
Erosion and loss of habitat on Round Island, Mauritius
Maori Use of Fire
Smokey the bear
Smokey the Bear
Longleaf Pine Savanna
Fire – Bitterroot National Forest, Montana, August 2000
Everglades Surface Water Flow
Forests and Deforestation Deforestation occurs when forest converted to another type of ecosystem Forests cover less than 6% of the earth’s total surface area Forests are the habitat for the majority of the earth’s known species Forests are being lost faster than they are growing
U.S. National Forests (green) and Grasslands (yellow)
United States Virgin Forests
Global Forest Loss Africa has lost 30% of its forests, Brazil has lost 40%, the Philippines has lost 50% and Europe has lost 70% In developing nations, 10 trees are cut down for every tree planted; in Africa that ratio is 20 to 1 FAO of the UN estimates that 100 million people in 26 countries face acute shortages of firewood
Gathering Firewood Kutum, Africa
Swidden Agriculture
Swidden Agriculture
Cattle Ranching Brazil
Tropical Dry Forest
Desertification Desertification is the conversion of grassland and savanna habitat into relatively sparse, unproductive vegetation The main cause of desertification is overgrazing by livestock
Rio Puerco Basin NM
Rio Puerco Basin
Rio Puerco Today
Overgrazing – Texas and England Left good, right overgrazed
Wetlands Wetlands are lands that are transitional between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems
Freshwater Wetland Types
General Locations of U.S. Wetlands
Crane Species 1. Eurasian Crane, 2. Black-necked crane, 3. Munktrana, 4. Sandhill Crane, 5. Whooping Crane, 6. Japanese crane, 7. White-naped Crane, 8. Sarus Crane, 9. Australian Crane, 10. Siberian Crane, 11. Wattled Crane, 12. Demoiselle Crane, 13. Blue Crane, 14. Black Crowned Crane, 15. Grey Crowned Crane
Grey Crowned Crane
Habitat Fragmentation Fragmentation is the breakdown of a habitat or ecosystem into smaller patches of that habitat or ecosystem that now are isolated from each other
Habitat Fragmentation
Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace
The Galapagos
Galapagos Tortoise
Galapagos Mockingbirds
Galapagos Mockingbirds collected by Darwin
Malay Archipelago
Beetles and Moths Collected by A.R. Wallace
Butterflies from Malay Archipelago
Sphingid Butterfly Diversity Malay Archipelago
Island Habitats in Baltic Sea
Reptile and Amphibian Species Area Curve for Caribbean Islands
Habitat Islands In the Great Basin Bird Species Mammal Species
Ant species On New Guinea and Nearby Islands
Real Slopes for Species-Area Curves Oceanic islandsbirds - New Guinea islands z=0.22 beetles - West Indiesz=0.34 land plants - Channel islandsz=0.37 Habitat islandsbirds - Andes paramo z=0.29 birds - mtns of Great Basin z=0.165 mammals - mtns of Great Basin z=0.326 inverts -caves in West Virginia z=0.72