| Biodiversity and Conservation source ref: biobook.html |
The Antarctic gravelbeard plunderfish (Artedidraco glareobarbatus), a
new species discovered at a depth of 130 m near Franklin Island in the Ross Sea. | MEASURING BIODIVERSITY Cataloging and Discovering Species Number of Species on Earth Geographical Patterns of Species Richness Biogeography Importance of Distribution Patterns Local Endemics Sparsely Distributed Species Migratory Species Conservation Hot Spots BIODIVERSITY IN THE UNITED STATES BIODIVERSITY IN CALIFORNIA THE CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY GAP Analysis |
In order to monitor and conserve biological diversity,
it is important to have ways of measuring it and documenting the levels of diversity in
different parts of the world. We have to consider diversity at different levels. There is
diversity between:
Subspecies are anatomically distinct from one
another, but still able to interbreed under natural conditions. The White Rhino is an
example we have already mentioned - it has northern and southern subspecies, each with
their own conservation problems.
The anatomical differences between subspecies
indicate that they are distinct genetic entities. They might often represent early stages
in the creation of new species. For these reasons they are eligible for listing and
protection under the Endangered Species Act, in the same way that species are protected.
The most useful level is the species,
because most scientists agree on what constitutes a species. A commonly accepted
definition is "a population whose members are able to interbreed freely under
natural conditions". The phrase "under natural conditions" is
important, because closely related species can often hybridize with one another under
unnatural conditions (e.g. captivity). Even tigers and lions can interbreed in captivity,
but there is no record of it having happened in nature (partly because they live in
different habitats). An interesting example is the red wolf which some authorities
consider a separate species, some a subspecies of gray wolf, and some a hybrid between the
coyote and the gray wolf.
Notice that this definition says nothing
about the commonly used criterion that species are usually anatomically different, or
different in appearance, from each other. Anatomical differences are, in fact, usually the
main basis for identifying and naming new species. Read about speciation - the process by
which new species are formed.
Cataloging the biodiversity on Earth is a
huge team effort. The The Tree of Life the All-species Foundation and the
All-species Inventory are efforts to use the World Wide Web to coordinate the efforts of
hundreds of biologists to classify and describe species.
The ultimate measure of biodiversity is the
total number of species in existence. Surprisingly, biologists do not agree on this
number, even to the nearest order of magnitude. There are about 1.8 million described
and named species of organisms. Over half of described species are insects from
temperate zones, but the real number of species of insects is very uncertain.
New Major Groups. Occasionally
radically new forms are found:
For many years biologists divided life forms into:
A third major group of organisms, called Archaea,
consisting of about 500 species, was discovered in 1977. They went undiscovered for so
long because they look very much like bacteria, and they are very difficult to culture in
the lab. They were first discovered in the most extreme environments on Earth - the
hottest, coldest, and highest pressure environments, in high salt and alkaline
environments, etc., so they are sometimes called "extremophiles". But now
scientists are finding that they are very abundant in the open ocean as well, especially
around Antarctica. In fact, they are so abundant that they are estimated to make up
about 30% of the biomass on Earth.
A novel type of animal (less than 1mm long) was found living on the mouth parts of lobsters (Funch and Kristensen, 1995). It is totally unlike any known type of animal, both in its anatomy and its very complex life cycle. It defines a new phylum (Cycliophora) of animals. Examples of the other 35 phyla of animals are annelids (worms), arthropods (insects, spiders, crustaceans), echinoderms (sea urchins and starfish), mollusks (snails, clams), and chordates (including all the vertebrates).
New Species. About 10,000 new species are found every year, and most of these are insects and other inconspicuous animals. Usually new species are related to known ones and therefore fit into already-known groups of species such as families. Even in well-known groups such as birds and mammals, new species are still being discovered, at the rate of about 1-5 birds and 1-5 mammals per year (mainly in the tropics). Some recent examples are:
New videos taken by remote-controlled submersibles show some amazing and huge squid that are different from all known families.
The coelacanth. This very primitive fish with fleshy fins was known only from 80-million year old fossils until in 1938 one showed up in a fish market on an island near Madagascar. History repeated itself in 1998 when another one was found, again in a fish market but this time in Indonesia suggesting the existence of another population in the deep sea, thousands of miles from the first one. Apparently these fish live in caves on the sides of underwater volcanoes. Read Samantha Weinberg's fascinating account of the discovery! (click on the book)
Sometimes species thought to be extinct are
rediscovered - for example the three-inch long, nocturnal, hairy-eared dwarf lemur
rediscovered in 1989 in Madagascar after being missing since 1964.
Even entirely new ecosystems are still being
discovered. In the last few decades new groups of organisms have been found living
in the following environments:
Until a few years ago, the total number of
species on earth was estimated at between 1.4 and 6 million. These estimates were obtained
as follows:
For the more conspicuous birds and mammals,
the number of species is known quite accurately, both for tropical species as well as
temperate ones. It is estimated that at least 98% of birds have been discovered. For birds
there are 2-3 times as many tropical species as temperate ones. For other organisms most
of the named species (1.4 million) are from temperate countries. If we assume that the
same factor applies to other organisms as to birds, then there are 2-3 times this many
tropical species (2.8-4.2 million, giving an estimated total species of 4.2-5.6 million.
A dramatic upward revision of these estimates
to 30 million came about as a result of work by Erwin on tropical beetles. Erwin used an
insecticidal fog, generated by a machine hoisted high in the tree canopy, to knock down
the canopy insects. Because they are so inaccessible, there had been few systematic
studies of tropical canopy insects. Erwin collected the arthropods from 19 trees of a
certain species (Luehea seemannii) in Panama over three seasons. The sample included 1,100
species of beetles!
To use this information to estimate the total
species number, we need to know what fraction of these are host-specific (i.e. found only
on this species of tree). The estimates (really guesses) are in the table. From this,
Erwin estimated that 160 beetle species are host tree-specific.
Beetles represent about 40% of all known
arthropod species; therefore Erwin estimated 160 x 100/40 = 400 arthropod species per tree
species. Next, he estimated that the canopy is roughly twice as species-rich as the forest
floor, and is composed mainly of different species. Therefore, including the forest floor
brings the total to 600 arthropod species per tree species.
The estimated total number of species of
tropical trees is 50,000. Therefore, the total number of tropical arthropod species is
estimated as 600 x 50,000 = 30 million.
Each step of Erwin's argument is
questionable. For example:
A more reliable estimate comes from work on
tropical bugs (hemipterans) on the island of Sulawesi, Indonesia by Hodkinson and Casson
(1991). They sampled bugs over a one-year period using several sampling methods at several
sites including a variety of host plants. They found that the rate of accumulation of
previously unrecorded species "slowed to a trickle" at the end of the study
period, indicating that they had identified a substantial fraction of the species in that
area. They found a total of 1690 species of which only 37.5% were previously described.
Total of described species of hemipterans is 78,656. Therefore, a simple estimate for the
real total is 78,656 x 100/37.5 = 209,749 (Hodkinson and Casson's calculation is a little
more complex and difficult to understand). Hemipterans represent about 10% of all
described insect species; therefore, the estimate for the total number of insect species
is about 2.1 million, giving an estimate for the total species number of about 5 million -
consistent with earlier estimates.
The best way to preserve biodiversity is, of
course, by protecting the habitats of as many species as possible. Since we cannot protect
everything, how do we decide which areas should receive the highest priority?
One way of assigning priorities would be to
select the regions with the greatest number of species. For most well-studied groups of
organisms, species richness increases from the poles to the equator.
The same geographical pattern is seen in the
marine environment. For example, on Australia's Great Barrier Reef, the number of genera
of coral is less than 10 at the southern end but more than 50 at the northern end. The
number of sea squirt species is 103 in the arctic but 629 in the tropics. Even deep sea
species diversity is higher in the tropics than at the poles.
The reason for the species richness of the
tropics is not known, but the following ideas have been proposed:
There are, of course, local patterns
superimposed on this global tendency, with some areas being especially rich in certain
groups of species. The Philippines, Indonesia, New Guinea and the Solomon Islands are rich
in many different types of organisms including corals.
In other places the wildlife is very abundant
although the number of species may not break any records. An example is the Southern
Ocean surrounding the Antarctic continent, which supports one of the most productive
ecosystems on Earth. The Antarctic Circumpolar Current brings nutrient-rich water to the
surface, supporting abundant growth of phytoplankton. The phytoplankton provides
food for shrimp-like krill, and the krill provides food for huge populations of fish,
birds, seals and whales.
The science of biogeography is the study of
the geographic distribution of organisms. It was started by Alfred Russell Wallace,
the co-originator with Charles Darwin of the theory of evolution. One of its
principles is that the earth can be divided into six or eight biogeographic realms -
the Nearctic, Palearctic, Ethiopian, Australian, Oriental, and Neotropical, in which the
organisms present tend to be quite distinct from those of other realms. For example, the
Australian realm is distinctive because of the large number of marsupials that have
evolved during its long isolation. It has seven endemic families of mammals, as well as
four of birds and 12 of flowering plants. Other systems have been drawn up for the marine
environment.
Each biogeographic realm is subdivided into
provinces, which reflect different types of environment within the realm. There are 227
provinces altogether.
Much more detailed classifications are
possible, and in fact essential for conservation purposes. The World Wildlife fund and
National Geographic Society recently mapped 867 terrestrial ecoregions of the world. Each
is distinguished by its ecological features, climate, and animal and plant communities.
An example of fine-scale ecological diversity
is provided by a small local canyon called Buck Gully, which contains nine different
habitat types defined by their plant communities: chaparral, grassland, riparian,
Venturan-Diegan coastal sage scrub, California buckwheat scrub, sagebrush scrub, mixed
sage scrub, southern cactus scrub, and sagebrush-grassland scrub, each containing
different collections of species and each worth preserving. The Nature Conservancy has
identified over 3000 plant communities. A good target would be to preserve enough of each
type of community to ensure its survival and that of all the species that live in it or
depend on it (for example, migratory species).
Obviously rare organisms are more prone to
extinction than common ones. However, the pattern of distribution is also important.
At one extreme are species which are
restricted to one very small area, although they may be very abundant at that location
(local endemics). The silversword plant grows only in the crater of Haleakala on Maui but
there are some 47,000 individuals at that site. The Devil's Hole pupfish is restricted to
a single desert spring in Nevada.
Locally endemic species tend to occur where
the geography provides isolated patches such as mountains, islands, peninsulas, certain
soil types or patches of forests surrounded by lava flows. Remote oceanic islands such as
Hawaii and Ascension have the world's most distinctive floras. 91% of the 956 plants
native to the Hawaiian Islands are endemic to those islands. The Hawaiian Islands are the
most remote islands on earth, being at least 2,000 miles from the nearest major land mass
in any direction. 80% of the 8,000 vascular plant species of Madagascar are endemic. 90%
of the 9,000 flowering plants of Papua New Guinea and 76% of New Caledonia's 3,250
vascular plants are endemic. By contrast, regions that are not geographically isolated
have lower proportions of endemic species - for example, only 1% of West Germany's species
are endemic.
Locally endemic species can be saved by
protecting a small area, but they are very susceptible to extinction due to
over-exploitation and habitat loss. This is why many of the well-known extinctions are of
species endemic to islands - notably the Dodo, the best-known example of extinction, which
was endemic to the island of Mauritius. About half of the known animal extinctions
in the last 400 years, and at least 90 percent of the bird extinctions, were of island
dwellers (see Chapter 12).
Marine organisms tend to be much more widely
distributed than terrestrial species because they encounter fewer physical barriers. Many
marine species, including snails, crabs, sharks and fish, are found throughout the
tropics. Most species found on Australia's Great Barrier Reef are also found in other
parts of the Indo-West Pacific.
There are, however, certain oceanic regions
that have a high proportion of locally endemic species. The Mediterranean Sea has a fairly
narrow connection to the Atlantic Ocean and this isolation has allowed the evolution of
numerous endemic species in the Mediterranean. Consequently 14% of the 362 species in the
Mediterranean are found nowhere else. Similarly, the Red Sea has 15% endemic fish species,
and the Gulf of California has 17%. Fish that are restricted to shallow waters can also
show a high frequency of endemism around isolated oceanic islands. For example 30 to 40%
of the fish species at Easter Island are locally endemic.
At the opposite extreme to local endemics are
sparsely distributed species, which occur over very large geographical regions but are not
very abundant anywhere. Top predators - animal species near the end of the food chain such
as large cats, wolves, bears, sharks and eagles - tend to be relatively scarce but widely
distributed. Saving these species in the wild is very difficult and expensive, even a
small population requiring protection of a large area or of smaller areas connected by
wildlife corridors. For example, the tiger's home range is 8-24 square miles. Top
predators have also been targets for hunters and have been unpopular with farmers because
they sometimes attack livestock or even people. The Grizzly Bear (subspecies of Brown
Bear) is the symbol of California but was hunted to extinction in this state.
Migratory species present challenging
problems because they often require habitats along and at each end of their migration
routes. Many songbirds in North America are threatened by habitat loss in Central and
South America as modernization of coffee plantations leaves less natural habitat than
older methods, and as North American forests become fragmented.
Recent research shows that sea turtles
migrate along well-defined corridors in the ocean. It might be necessary to provide
protection of these migration routes as well as the nesting beaches in order to
effectively conserve these species. Many of the world's most important feeding and nesting
sites are along the coast of West Africa, and six species that depend on those sites are
declining rapidly due to poaching for meat, eggs and shell.
The Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) was
established to address the special political problems associated with conserving migratory
species, many of which are in steep decline. The Convention uses a similar
listing system to other conventions, in which the most endangered species are on
"Appendix I" and species for which the threat is less imminent are on
"Appendix II". At the September 2002 meeting some of the notable new
listings on Appendix I were the Bactrian Camel (down to less than 1000 individuals), the
Great White Shark and three species of whale.
The high levels of endemism in certain areas
of the world, coupled with imminent threats from habitat loss in many of these areas, has
led to the designation, by World Conservation Union (IUCN) and Conservation International,
of "hot spots" for preservation. Coastal California is one of these regions.
Other regions are the Atlantic coast of Brazil, Madagascar, and the Indo-west
Pacific.
U.S. biodiversity in jeopardy, study shows
Two important facts about California:
The high biological significance of Southern
California was also highlighted in a recent study of the geographic distribution of
endangered species in the U.S. (Dobson et al., Science 275; 550). The maps show the number
of listed species in each county for several groups of organisms. For plants especially,
Southern California turns out to be a "hot spot" of threatened biodiversity. The
other hot spots are Hawaii, the southeastern coastal states, and southern Appalachia. As
expected, in most cases, hot spots occur where the ranges of many endemic species overlap
with intensive urbanization and agriculture.
The predicted population growth means there
will inevitably be increasing pressure on our natural resources in the coming
decades. California has an urgent need to establish programs for cataloguing and
preserving biodiversity. Fortunately the state is taking this task fairly
seriously. In fact, a recent survey by the organization Defenders of Wildlife
concluded that California has the nation's best biodiversity policies and programs. This
was mainly in response to the development of Natural Communities Conservation Planning
(see later lecture) and partly to the establishment of the the California Biodiversity
Council, whose role is to "develop guiding principles and policies, design a
statewide strategy to conserve biological diversity, and coordinate implementation of this
strategy through regional and local institutions".
The California Resources Agency is
responsible for the conservation, enhancement, and management of California's natural and
cultural resources, including land, water, wildlife, parks, minerals, and historic sites.
One of their programs is the California Environmental Resources Evaluation System (CERES),
an information system designed to "facilitate access to a variety of electronic data
describing California's rich and diverse environments".
In California, the California Department of
Fish and Game (DFG) has the responsibility for identifying the most significant natural
areas in the State.
Significant Natural Areas are those sites
which meet at least one of the following criteria.
1.Areas supporting extremely rare species or
natural communities;
2.Areas supporting associations or concentrations of rare species or communities;
3.Areas exhibiting representative examples of common or rare communities;
4.Areas of high species-richness or habitat-richness.
The DFG has also produced an on-line map of
habitat types in California. They also have an active program of documenting
California's wildlife and endangered species. Visit their California Wildlife
Habitat Relationships page.
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD)
was signed by over 150 governments at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, and became
effective as international law in December 1993. It is the first international agreement
committing governments to comprehensive protection of the Earth's biological
resources. As of April, 2001, 180 countries and the European Union had ratified
the agreement, but the United States has not done so, mainly due to the efforts of a group
of senators who felt that the treaty required giving "half of America back to the
wolves to save the earth".
The CBD has three overall goals:
By signing the CBD, participating governments
agree to carry out various measures to conserve biodiversity. The measures include (among
other things):
The CBD has also published a useful Global
Biodiversity Outlook.
The CBD also includes agreements for using
biological diversity. And governments must provide for "fair sharing" of the
benefits derived from genetic resources (i.e. compensation for its use or transfer of
technology derived from genetic resources).
The requirements of the CBD are being met in
this country by the Biological Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey (formerly
the National Biological Service), established in 1993. Its operating mission is "to
work with others to provide the scientific understanding and technologies needed to
support the sound management and conservation of the nation's biological resources."
It sponsors a variety of national scientific research programs as well as a national
information infrastructure program. It has the following Strategic Science
Plan:
BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES DIVISION STRATEGIC
SCIENCE PLAN September 3, 1996
A National Biological Survey for the United
States? from the Australian Nature Conservation Agency, provides an interesting
perspective on how science should contribute to conservation
rather than just collect information.
The U.S. Geological Service has developed a method for digitized mapping of many parameters important for conservation, including the distribution of plant communities and of vertebrate animals, and the geographic pattern of land use. This method is called GAP analysis, because it was designed to identify gaps in the system of protected land areas, where insufficient protection was being provided for endangered and other species. It certainly can perform this function (see example in slide show). However, the technology can also be used for many other purposes where geographic comparisons are important, such as monitoring changes in species distribution caused by climate change; for mapping levels of contaminants so they can be compared with changes in species distribution; for tracking the spread of exotic species and of urbanization and their consequences for species distribution, and so on.
Seas Yield a Bounty of Species by David Malakoff