Conservation Biology

33
Conservation Biology Biodiversity

description

Conservation Biology. Biodiversity. Trophic Levels. Primary Producers Primary Consumers Secondary Consumers Tertiary Consumers Quaternary Consumers. Trophic Levels. Primary Producers Primary Consumers Secondary Consumers Tertiary Consumers Quaternary Consumers. Keystone Species. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Conservation Biology

Page 1: Conservation Biology

Conservation Biology

Biodiversity

Page 2: Conservation Biology

Trophic LevelsPrimary ProducersPrimary ConsumersSecondary ConsumersTertiary ConsumersQuaternary Consumers

Page 3: Conservation Biology

Trophic LevelsPrimary ProducersPrimary ConsumersSecondary ConsumersTertiary ConsumersQuaternary Consumers

Page 4: Conservation Biology

Keystone Species

Page 5: Conservation Biology

Keystone Species

Page 6: Conservation Biology

Keystone SpeciesCoyote –Keystone species in Walnut

Killing coyotes means an increase in a few dominant species Residents complain about rodent problems when coyotes disappear

Page 7: Conservation Biology

Biodiversity – Number of Species?

Page 8: Conservation Biology

Biodiversity Levels

Genetic SpeciesCommunity and Ecosystem

Page 9: Conservation Biology

Biodiversity Levels

AlphaNumber of taxa in a local area

GammaNumber of taxa in a region

BetaThe turnover of species from one habitat to another

Page 10: Conservation Biology

Geographic Patterns in Species Diversity

Latitude60 degrees N40 degrees N20 degrees N

Ant Species10 species50 – 100 species100 – 200 species

Page 11: Conservation Biology

Geographic Patterns in Species Diversity

CountryGreenlandNew YorkGuatemalaColombia

Bird Species56 species105 species469 species1395 species

Page 12: Conservation Biology

Bird Diversity in North and Central America

Page 13: Conservation Biology

Geographic Patterns in Species Diversity

Location

Arctic WatersTemperate WatersTropical Seas

Marine Species (Tunicates)

100 species400 species600 species

Page 14: Conservation Biology

Latitude BeltsTemperate Zone Habitats

MarshGrasslandShrublandDesertConiferous ForestsUpland DeciduousFloodplain Deciduous

# of Bird Species (E. J. Tramer)

661414172124

Page 15: Conservation Biology

Foliage Height DiversityAdding new layers adds new habitats for additional species

Page 16: Conservation Biology

North American Diversity (MacArthur and MacArthur)

Mammals and Breeding Land Birds

Increase from North to SouthMore in the west

• Increases with heterogeneity

Reptiles and Amphibians

More abundant in East• Reptiles – mountains• Amphibians - water

Page 17: Conservation Biology

Island BiogeographyMacArthur and Wilson (1960’s)

Page 18: Conservation Biology
Page 19: Conservation Biology
Page 20: Conservation Biology

Primary ProductivityThe amount of light energy that is converted into chemical energyOften expressed as biomass

Page 21: Conservation Biology

Pyramid of Net Productivity

Page 22: Conservation Biology

Secondary ProductivityThe rate at which an ecosystem converts the chemical energy of the food they eat into their own biomass10% rule

Page 23: Conservation Biology

Biodiversity Crisis

Extinction Rates are increasingToxins (biological magnification)Greenhouse effect / Ozone depletionOverpopulation

Major threats to BiodiversityHabitat DestructionOverexploitationIntroduction of exotics

Page 24: Conservation Biology

ConservationEndangered Species

in danger of becoming extinctThreatened Species

likely to become endangered in the near future

Genetic DiversityLosing individuals or populations loses genetic diversity

Page 25: Conservation Biology
Page 26: Conservation Biology

Habitat Fragmentation

Page 27: Conservation Biology

ConservationEdgesCorridorsProtect landscapes not individual speciesSustainable development

Page 28: Conservation Biology
Page 29: Conservation Biology

Edge Effect

Page 30: Conservation Biology

Corridors

Page 31: Conservation Biology
Page 32: Conservation Biology

Population Viability AnalysisPredicts whether a species will persist in an environment

minimum viable populationeffective population size

Page 33: Conservation Biology

ExtinctionBackground

Several species a year just go extinct – They are replaced

MassLarge scale extinction – species replaced due to adaptive radiation of remaining species

AnthropogenicLarge scale extinction – species being replaced by a single species (humans)