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Published byEdwin Jackson Modified over 8 years ago
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Chapter 55 – Conservation Biology Goal oriented science seeking to counter the biodiversity crisis.
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I. Biodiversity Crisis Rapid decrease in the Earth’s variety of life.
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A. Loss of Genetic Diversity Reduction in genetic diversity leads to detriment of overall adaptive prospects
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B. Loss of Species Diversity Less types of species Endangered vs. threatened Local vs. global extinction Loss of species = loss of genes
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C. Loss of Ecosystem Diversity Each ecosystem has an effect on the entire biosphere
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D. 4 Major Threats to Biodiversity 1.Habitat Destruction 2.Introduced Species 3.Overexploitation 4.Disruption of Food Chains * Examples of each?
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II. Conservation at the Population and Species Level
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A. Small-Population Approach 1.Small populations are susceptible to inbreeding and genetic drift 2.Extinction vortex
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B. How Small is Too Small? 1.MVP – minimum viable population size / use computers to determine 2.PVA – population viability analysis / use MVP to predict population survival chances 3.N e – effective population size / based on breeding potential - N e = 4N f N m / N f + N m - Use family size, maturation age, genetic relatedness, gene flow, population size, etc. - low N e = inbreeding, bottlenecking, reduced heterozygosity
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C. Declining Population Approach 1.Diagnosis a. Confirm decline b. Determine environmental requirements c. Determine possible cause / hypothesize d. Predictions for each hypothesis e. Test most likely hypothesis f. Apply results
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III. Conservation at the Community, Ecosystem, and Landscape Level
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A. Edges and Corridors 1.Edge – boundaries of ecosystems - have their own communities - sites of speciation 2.Movement Corridors – strips or clumps of quality habitat connecting patches / riparian areas - promote dispersal and reduce inbreeding
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B. Preserving Ecosystems 1.Biodiversity Hot Spot - small area with lots of endemic, endangered, and threatened species - make national parks here / too small 2.Zoned Reserves - large area - several undisturbed areas surrounded by human changed areas
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C. Restorative Ecology Is all damaged land “reclaimable”? 1.Bioremediation – use of biological organisms to detoxify polluted ecosystems 2.Biological Augmentation – use of organisms to add essential materials to degraded ecosystems
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D. We NEED to Reassess Our Priorities
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