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1 Chapter 5: Biomes and Biodiversity Principles of Environmental Science - Inquiry and Applications, 3rd Edition by William and Mary Ann Cunningham Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
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3 Part 1: Biomes Biomes Broadly defined life zones Environments with similar climates, topographies, soil conditions, and biological communities Distribution mainly dependent on temperature and precipitation
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4 ADD FIG. 5.1
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5 Biomes of the World
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6 ADD FIG. 5.4
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13 Part 2: Biodiversity Genetic diversity - variety of different versions of the same genes within a species Species diversity - number of different kinds of organisms within an ecosystem Ecological diversity - complexity of a biological community (number of niches, trophic levels, etc.) Biodiversity - the variety of living things - three types essential:
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14 How many species are there?
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15 Biodiversity Hotspots Most of the world's biodiversity concentrations are near the equator (tropical rainforests, coral reefs).
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16 Part 3: How do we benefit from biodiversity? Food Drugs and medicines Ecological benefits Aesthetic and cultural benefits
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17 Fig. 5.21
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19 Aesthetic and cultural benefits Bird watching and other wildlife observation contribute more than $29 billion each year to the U.S. economy.
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20 Part 4: What Threatens Biodiversity? Extinction - the elimination of a species Natural process - one species lost every 10 years Process been accelerated by human impacts on populations and ecosystems E.O. Wilson - we are currently losing thousands of species a year
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22 Part 5: Human-Caused Reductions in Biodiversity Habitat destruction and fragmentation Hunting and fishing Commercial products and live specimens Predator and pest control Exotic species introduction Diseases Pollution Genetic assimilation
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23 About 200 years ago, the American passenger pigeon was probably the world's most abundant bird. Population: 3-5 billion Over hunting and habitat destruction caused its extinction.
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24 Trade in Products from Endangered Species
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25 Trade in Wildlife About 75% of all saltwater tropical aquarium fish sold come from coral reefs of the Philippines and Indonesia, where they are commonly caught with dynamite or cyanide.
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26 Part 6: Protecting Biodiversity Hunting and fishing laws The Endangered Species Act (ESA) Recovery plans Reintroductions Minimum viable population Private land and critical habitat Reauthorization of the ESA International wildlife treaties
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