Conservation Biology

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Example of departure from nestedness - plants in U.S. remnant parries and forests

1) archipelagoes of small sites contain more species than single large sites of equal total area 2) no species excluded from small sites 3) rare species more often found in small sites

Patterson and nestedness

1) extinction is nonrandom 2) species composition of small habitat fragments converges In small patches 3) widespread generalists survive 4) local, rare ones don't Conclusion - we need larger reserves

Anthropogenic extinction causes

1) habitat destruction - agriculture - forestry - desertification (desert actually spreading) - salinization 2) introduced species 3) hunting 4) climate change

Species most vulnerable to local + regional extinction

1) naturally rare species - low densities or limited geographic distributions 2) wide-ranging species 3) non-mobile species 4) species with low fecundity (offspring) 5) species dependent on patchy or unpredictable resources 6) interior species (edge avoidance) 7) species vulnerable to human exploitation

Community theory and conservation

1) reserve design 2) species area relationship and island biogeography directly applicable 3) SLOSS debate

Habitat fragmentation: factors affecting diversity

1) time since isolation 2) degree of isolation - distance from unfragmented habitat - distance from other patches 3) crowding effects - mobile species move to remaining fragments

Oak masting

All over reproduce acorns one year - mice pop. increases, predator pop. increases... so not all acorns consumed - following years normal production

Human caused extinction

Anthropogenic extinction

As ecosystem gradually change, ____ extinction occurs

Background

Stochasicity

Chance events that change pop. size - fires, diseases, storms - may cause extinction

For a population of a certain size, what is the probability of extinction?

Depends on birth rate, death rate, and starting pop. size - probability of 1 = 100% extinction - the larger the pop. the smaller the probability of extinction

Example of probability of extinction

Do the math silly

Age structure

Ethiopia lots of young people so population growing - other graph less babies so pop. expected to shrink

Small disturbances cause ___ of local populations

Extirpation

Habitat island faunas tend to form nested subsets

Faunas on small patches tend to be nested of larger patches - if true, the SL > SS

Edge effects and reserve design: what shape is best?

Forest edges - modified immigration/emigration; reduced rescue effect Altered microclimate 1) daytime temp higher, nighttime temp lower 2) humidity reduced 3) problems worse at high latitudes (solar angle) 4) secondary growth can help 5) shade tolerant species lost

Departures from nestedness

If sites are non-nested OR if small sites contain more species... SLOSS debate is not settled

Another example of nested subset model

Large islands have more species

Large natural catastrophes have causes ___ ___

Mass extinctions

Population viability analysis

More than just population models - PVA models include: 1) available habitat area 2) predicted human population expansion 3) habitat quality 4) interconnected metapopulations * guide management decisions

Ultimate causes of extinction

Population extinction risk is affected by - population size - geographic range (small range more likely to go extinct) - age structure - sex structure - life history (how often reproduce) - stochasticity

Central aim of conservation

Prevent extinction

Yellowstone grizzlies: why did their population recover?

Reintroduction of 41 wolves in 1990s - wolves kill elk... can't defend its kill from a bear, or bear gets leftovers - pop. went from 35 to over 500 (deemed recovered)

SLOSS debate

Single Large or Several Small (nature reserves) - which hold more species - large or small sites? - answer is difficult: jaguar may not be able to move b/w patches but bobcats can

Pseudoextinction

Sp1 evolves to Sp2... Sp1 no longer exists

Natural extinction

Species evolve, flourish, and go extinct

Life history: California Condor

Victims of life history? - don't reproduce regularly - only have 1-2 babies per cycle - associated with parental care - K selection works best at high density

Why does extinction happen?

When species fail to adapt - species adapt slowly be evolution - humans change ecosystems rapidly - change outpaces adaptation

Edge effects

Wind speed increases transporting pests and disease Water flux modified - interception of water by plants changed - evapotranspiration modified

Yellowstone grizzlies: why did their population decrease?

Yellowstone closed off garbage dumps - perhaps started to starve, then recovered

SLOSS is ___ specific

context

Bigger islands generally have more species, but not always perfectly nested

ex. island that's 65 units has species island that's 118 units does not


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