BIODIVERSITY
AND CONSERVATION
BIODIVERSITY
AND CONSERVATION
·
Biodiversity: the term biodiversity refers to the
totality of genes, species, and ecosystems of a region.
·
Types
of biodiversity described by Edward Wilson:
o
Genetic
diversity: A single species might show high
diversity at the genetic level over its distributional range.
§ Medicinal plant Rauwolfia
vomitoria of Himalayan range produces active chemical reserpine shows
genetic variation.
§ India has more than 50000 different
strain of rice.
§ 1000 varieties of mango.
·
Species
diversity: different
species of a single animal like frog.
·
Ecological
diversity: diversity in the ecosystem level
like desert, rain forest, mangroves, coral reef, wetlands, estuaries etc.
How many
species are there on Earth and How many in India?
·
According
to IUCN (2004), 1.5 million of plants and animals are in our biosphere.
·
Robert
May places global species diversity at
about 7 millions.
·
More
than 70 percent of all the species recorded are animals.
·
All
plants constitute about 22 percent.
·
Among
animals insects constitute 70 percent.
·
India
has only 2.4 percent of the world’s land area; its share of global species
diversity is impressive 8.1 percent.
·
India
is considered one of the mega diversity countries of the world.
Pattern of
Biodiversity:
Latitudinal
gradients:
·
Species
diversity decreases as we move away from the equator towards the pole.
·
Tropic
(23.5o N to 23.5o S) harbors more species than temperate
and pole
·
The
largely tropical Amazonian rain forest in South America has the greatest
biodiversity on earth:
·
40,000
species of plants.
·
3000
species of fishes.
·
1300
of birds.
·
427
amphibians
·
378
reptiles
·
More
than 1, 25,000 invertebrates.
Why
tropical rain forest has greater biodiversity:
·
Unlike
temperate regions subjected to frequent glaciations in the past, tropical
latitudes have remained relatively undisturbed for millions of years and thus,
had a long evolutionary time for species diversification.
·
Tropical
environments. Unlike temperate ones, are less seasonal, relatively more
constant and predictable, promotes niche specialization and lead to greater
species diversity.
·
There
is more solar energy available in the tropics, which contribute to higher
productivity.
Species
area relationship:
·
ALEXANDER
VON HUMBOLDT observed within a region
species richness increased with increasing
explored area but only up to a limit.
·
The
relation between species richness and area for a wide variety of taxa turns out
to be a rectangular hyperbola.
·
On
a logarithmic scale the relationship is a straight line describe by the
equation LogS = logC +Z log A
Where S= species richness, A = Area,
Z = slope of the line (regression coefficient), C = Y- intercept.
·
It
has been noted that regardless of the taxonomic group or region the slope of
the regression line are amazingly similar. However, for
a very large area like the entire
continent the slope of the line is steeper.
Importance
of species diversity to the Ecosystem:
·
Community
with more species generally tends to be more stable than those with less
species.
·
A
stable community should not show too much variation in productivity from year
to year; it must be resistant or resilient to occasional disturbances (natural
or man-made)
·
Stable
community must be resistant to invasion by alien species.
·
David
Tillman’s long-term field experiment finds that:
o
Plots
with more species showed less year to year variation in biomass
o
Increased
diversity contributed to higher productivity.
·
·
The
rivet popper hypothesis:
o
In
an airplane (ecosystem) all parts are joined together by thousands of rivets
(species).
o
If
every passenger starts popping a rivet to take home (species extinct), it may
not affect flight safety initially but as more and more rivets are removed the
plane becomes dangerously weak.
o
Further
more which rivet is removed may also be critical.
o
Loss
of rivets on the wings (key species) is obviously a more serious threat to
flight safety than loss of a few rivets on the seats or windows inside the
plane.
Loss of
Biodiversity:
·
The
IUCN Red List (2004) documents the extinction of 784 species.
·
Recent
extinction includes:
o
Dodo
(Mauritius).
o
Quake
(Africa)
o
Thylacine
(Australia)
o
Stiller’s
cow (Russia)
o
Three
subspecies of tiger (Bali, Java, Caspian).
·
Since
the origin and diversification of life on earth there were five episodes
of mass extinction of species.
·
The
sixth mass Extinctions in progress now.
How the’
sixth Extinction’ is different from the previous five extinctions.
·
The
current extinction rate is 100 to 1000 times faster.
·
All
others are pre-human period, this one is anthropogenic.
Effect of
biodiversity loss:
- Decline in plant production.
- Lowered resistance to
environmental perturbations such as drought.
- Increased variability in
certain ecosystem processes such as plant productivity, water use, and
pest and disease cycle.
Causes of
biodiversity loss:
- The present loss is all due to
human activity (anthropogenic)
- There are four major causes “The
Evil Quartet” are as follows:
Habitat
loss and fragmentation:
- Most important cause driving
animals and plants to extinct.
- The tropical rain forest
reduced to 6 % from 14 % of earth land surface.
- The Amazonian rain forest is
called as ‘lungs of the planet ‘is being cut cleared for
cultivating soya beans.
- Degradation of many habitat by
pollution is also threatens the loss of diversity.
- Large areas are broken into
figments also the cause of diversity loss.
Over-exploitation:
- When ‘need’ turns to ‘greed’ it
leads to over-exploitation of natural resources.
- Many species extinctions in the
last 500 years (Stiller’s cow, passenger pigeons) were due to
over-exploitation.
- Many marine fish populations
around the world are over harvested.
Alien
species invasion:
- The alien species became
invasive and cause decline or extinction of indigenous species.
- Nile perch introduced into Lake Victoria
in east Africa led to extinction of 200 species of cichlid fish in
the lake.
- Parthenium, (carrot grass), Lantana, and water
hyacinth (Eichornia) posed a thread to indigenous species.
- African cat fish Clarias
gariepinus for aquaculture purposed is posing a threat to
indigenous catfishes in our rivers.
Co-extinction:
- When a species becomes extinct,
the plant and animal species associated with it an obligatory way also
become extinct.
- Extinction of Host species
leads to extinction of the parasite also.
- Co-evolved plant-pollinator
mutualism where extinction of one invariably lead to the extinction of the
other.
BIODIVERSITY
CONSERVATION:
Why should
we conserve Biodiversity?
Reason for conservation biodiversity is grouped into three categories.
Reason for conservation biodiversity is grouped into three categories.
- Narrowly utilitarian.
- Broadly utilitarian
- Ethical
Narrowly
utilitarian:
- Human derive countless direct
economic benefits from nature-
- Food (cereals, pulses, fruits),
firewood, fiber, construction material.
- Industrial products (tannins,
lubricants, dyes, resins, perfumes)
- Products of medicinal
importance.
- Bioprospecting: exploring molecular genetic
and species-level diversity for products of economic importance.
Broadly
Utilitarian
- Amazonian forest along produce
20% of oxygen during photosynthesis.
- Pollinator layer: bees, bumblebees, birds and
bat that pollinate the plant without which seed cannot be produced by
plants.
- Aesthetic pleasure we get from
the biodiversity.
How do we
conserve biodiversity?
In situ
conservation:
- When we conserve and protect
the whole ecosystem, its biodiversity at all level is protected – we save
the entire forest to save the tiger. This approach is called in situ
(on site) conservation.
- Biodiversity hot spot: regions with very high levels
of species richness and high degree of endemism.(species confined
to that region and not found anywhere else)
- Hot spot in biodiversity is
also regions of accelerated habitat loss.
- Out of 34 hot spot in the
world, three hot spot located in India:
- Western Ghats and Srilanka.
- Indo-Burma.
- Himalaya.
- Other protected area under in
situ conservations are:
- 14 biosphere reserve
- 90 national park
- 448 wild life sanctuary
- Sacred groves: tract of forest were set aside,
and all the trees and wildlife within were venerated and given total
protection.
Ex situ
conservation: threatened
animals and plants are taken out from their natural habitat and placed in
special setting where they can be protected and given special care.
- Zoological Park.
- Botanical garden
- Wildlife safari.
- Conservation of gamete by cryopreservation.
- Genetic strains are preserved
in seed bank.
Convention
on Biodiversity:
- “The earth Summit” held in Rio de Jeneiro in
1992 called upon all nations to take appropriate measures for conservation
of biodiversity and sustainable utilization of its benefits.
World
Summit on Sustainable development held in
2002 in Johannesburg, South Africa, 190 countries pledged their commitment to
achieve by 2010 a significant reduction in the current rate of biodiversity
loss at global, regional and local level.
BIODIVERSITY
AND CONSERVATION
·
Biodiversity: the term biodiversity refers to the
totality of genes, species, and ecosystems of a region.
·
Types
of biodiversity described by Edward Wilson:
o
Genetic
diversity: A single species might show high
diversity at the genetic level over its distributional range.
§ Medicinal plant Rauwolfia
vomitoria of Himalayan range produces active chemical reserpine shows
genetic variation.
§ India has more than 50000 different
strain of rice.
§ 1000 varieties of mango.
·
Species
diversity: different
species of a single animal like frog.
·
Ecological
diversity: diversity in the ecosystem level
like desert, rain forest, mangroves, coral reef, wetlands, estuaries etc.
How many
species are there on Earth and How many in India?
·
According
to IUCN (2004), 1.5 million of plants and animals are in our biosphere.
·
Robert
May places global species diversity at
about 7 millions.
·
More
than 70 percent of all the species recorded are animals.
·
All
plants constitute about 22 percent.
·
Among
animals insects constitute 70 percent.
·
India
has only 2.4 percent of the world’s land area; its share of global species
diversity is impressive 8.1 percent.
·
India
is considered one of the mega diversity countries of the world.
Pattern of
Biodiversity:
Latitudinal
gradients:
·
Species
diversity decreases as we move away from the equator towards the pole.
·
Tropic
(23.5o N to 23.5o S) harbors more species than temperate
and pole
·
The
largely tropical Amazonian rain forest in South America has the greatest
biodiversity on earth:
·
40,000
species of plants.
·
3000
species of fishes.
·
1300
of birds.
·
427
amphibians
·
378
reptiles
·
More
than 1, 25,000 invertebrates.
Why
tropical rain forest has greater biodiversity:
·
Unlike
temperate regions subjected to frequent glaciations in the past, tropical
latitudes have remained relatively undisturbed for millions of years and thus,
had a long evolutionary time for species diversification.
·
Tropical
environments. Unlike temperate ones, are less seasonal, relatively more
constant and predictable, promotes niche specialization and lead to greater
species diversity.
·
There
is more solar energy available in the tropics, which contribute to higher
productivity.
Species
area relationship:
·
ALEXANDER
VON HUMBOLDT observed within a region
species richness increased with increasing
explored area but only up to a limit.
·
The
relation between species richness and area for a wide variety of taxa turns out
to be a rectangular hyperbola.
·
On
a logarithmic scale the relationship is a straight line describe by the
equation LogS = logC +Z log A
Where S= species richness, A = Area,
Z = slope of the line (regression coefficient), C = Y- intercept.
·
It
has been noted that regardless of the taxonomic group or region the slope of
the regression line are amazingly similar. However, for
a very large area like the entire
continent the slope of the line is steeper.
Importance
of species diversity to the Ecosystem:
·
Community
with more species generally tends to be more stable than those with less
species.
·
A
stable community should not show too much variation in productivity from year
to year; it must be resistant or resilient to occasional disturbances (natural
or man-made)
·
Stable
community must be resistant to invasion by alien species.
·
David
Tillman’s long-term field experiment finds that:
o
Plots
with more species showed less year to year variation in biomass
o
Increased
diversity contributed to higher productivity.
·
·
The
rivet popper hypothesis:
o
In
an airplane (ecosystem) all parts are joined together by thousands of rivets
(species).
o
If
every passenger starts popping a rivet to take home (species extinct), it may
not affect flight safety initially but as more and more rivets are removed the
plane becomes dangerously weak.
o
Further
more which rivet is removed may also be critical.
o
Loss
of rivets on the wings (key species) is obviously a more serious threat to
flight safety than loss of a few rivets on the seats or windows inside the
plane.
Loss of
Biodiversity:
·
The
IUCN Red List (2004) documents the extinction of 784 species.
·
Recent
extinction includes:
o
Dodo
(Mauritius).
o
Quake
(Africa)
o
Thylacine
(Australia)
o
Stiller’s
cow (Russia)
o
Three
subspecies of tiger (Bali, Java, Caspian).
·
Since
the origin and diversification of life on earth there were five episodes
of mass extinction of species.
·
The
sixth mass Extinctions in progress now.
How the’
sixth Extinction’ is different from the previous five extinctions.
·
The
current extinction rate is 100 to 1000 times faster.
·
All
others are pre-human period, this one is anthropogenic.
Effect of
biodiversity loss:
- Decline in plant production.
- Lowered resistance to
environmental perturbations such as drought.
- Increased variability in
certain ecosystem processes such as plant productivity, water use, and
pest and disease cycle.
Causes of
biodiversity loss:
- The present loss is all due to
human activity (anthropogenic)
- There are four major causes “The
Evil Quartet” are as follows:
Habitat
loss and fragmentation:
- Most important cause driving
animals and plants to extinct.
- The tropical rain forest
reduced to 6 % from 14 % of earth land surface.
- The Amazonian rain forest is
called as ‘lungs of the planet ‘is being cut cleared for
cultivating soya beans.
- Degradation of many habitat by
pollution is also threatens the loss of diversity.
- Large areas are broken into
figments also the cause of diversity loss.
Over-exploitation:
- When ‘need’ turns to ‘greed’ it
leads to over-exploitation of natural resources.
- Many species extinctions in the
last 500 years (Stiller’s cow, passenger pigeons) were due to
over-exploitation.
- Many marine fish populations
around the world are over harvested.
Alien
species invasion:
- The alien species became
invasive and cause decline or extinction of indigenous species.
- Nile perch introduced into Lake Victoria
in east Africa led to extinction of 200 species of cichlid fish in
the lake.
- Parthenium, (carrot grass), Lantana, and water
hyacinth (Eichornia) posed a thread to indigenous species.
- African cat fish Clarias
gariepinus for aquaculture purposed is posing a threat to
indigenous catfishes in our rivers.
Co-extinction:
- When a species becomes extinct,
the plant and animal species associated with it an obligatory way also
become extinct.
- Extinction of Host species
leads to extinction of the parasite also.
- Co-evolved plant-pollinator
mutualism where extinction of one invariably lead to the extinction of the
other.
BIODIVERSITY
CONSERVATION:
Why should
we conserve Biodiversity?
Reason for conservation biodiversity is grouped into three categories.
Reason for conservation biodiversity is grouped into three categories.
- Narrowly utilitarian.
- Broadly utilitarian
- Ethical
Narrowly
utilitarian:
- Human derive countless direct
economic benefits from nature-
- Food (cereals, pulses, fruits),
firewood, fiber, construction material.
- Industrial products (tannins,
lubricants, dyes, resins, perfumes)
- Products of medicinal
importance.
- Bioprospecting: exploring molecular genetic
and species-level diversity for products of economic importance.
Broadly
Utilitarian
- Amazonian forest along produce
20% of oxygen during photosynthesis.
- Pollinator layer: bees, bumblebees, birds and
bat that pollinate the plant without which seed cannot be produced by
plants.
- Aesthetic pleasure we get from
the biodiversity.
How do we
conserve biodiversity?
In situ
conservation:
- When we conserve and protect
the whole ecosystem, its biodiversity at all level is protected – we save
the entire forest to save the tiger. This approach is called in situ
(on site) conservation.
- Biodiversity hot spot: regions with very high levels
of species richness and high degree of endemism.(species confined
to that region and not found anywhere else)
- Hot spot in biodiversity is
also regions of accelerated habitat loss.
- Out of 34 hot spot in the
world, three hot spot located in India:
- Western Ghats and Srilanka.
- Indo-Burma.
- Himalaya.
- Other protected area under in
situ conservations are:
- 14 biosphere reserve
- 90 national park
- 448 wild life sanctuary
- Sacred groves: tract of forest were set aside,
and all the trees and wildlife within were venerated and given total
protection.
Ex situ
conservation: threatened
animals and plants are taken out from their natural habitat and placed in
special setting where they can be protected and given special care.
- Zoological Park.
- Botanical garden
- Wildlife safari.
- Conservation of gamete by cryopreservation.
- Genetic strains are preserved
in seed bank.
Convention
on Biodiversity:
- “The earth Summit” held in Rio de Jeneiro in
1992 called upon all nations to take appropriate measures for conservation
of biodiversity and sustainable utilization of its benefits.
World
Summit on Sustainable development held in
2002 in Johannesburg, South Africa, 190 countries pledged their commitment to
achieve by 2010 a significant reduction in the current rate of biodiversity
loss at global, regional and local level.