Species Diversity

Thylacine

What is a species?  Species = Latin for “kind” or “appearance”  Linnaeus described species in terms of their morphology  Modern taxonomists also consider genetic makeup and functional and behavioral differences when describing species

The biological species concept (BSC) emphasizes reproductive isolation  Ernst Mayr 1942  A biological species is defined as a population or group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed and produce viable, fertile offspring but cannot do so with members of other species – The species is the largest unit of population in which gene flow is possible – It is defined by reproductive isolation from other species in natural environments (hybrids may be possible in the lab or in zoos)

Other species concepts

How many species are there?  Estimates range from 4 - 112 million species, of which only 1.7 million have been described  14 million is a good compromise

Where is biodiversity high?  Only 10-15% of species identified are found in North America and Europe  Greatest concentration of species in tropical rainforests and coral reefs  Biodiversity hotspots – Have exceptional numbers of endemic species

Biodiversity hotspots

Amazing diversity

Taxonomic difficulties  Sister or cryptic species

Intrinsic and Instrumental Value  Instrumental (Utilitarian, Conferred) - Worth or value only because they are valued by someone who matters – Anthropocentric  Intrinsic (Inherent, Innate) - Worth or value simply because of existence – Biocentric or ecocentric Endangered Species Act (ESA)  ESA provides “..a means whereby the ecosystems upon which endangered species and threatened species depend may be conserved, and to provide a program for the conservation of such endangered species and threatened species.”

Endangered Species Act (ESA)  Species, subspecies and populations are listed as either endangered or threatened (all referred to as “species”) – An Endangered Species is any species which is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range – A Threatened Species is any species which is likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range

Endangered Species Act (ESA)  Administered by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of the Interior  The Secretary of the Interior may not take into account the economic effects that listing may have on the area where the species occurs  Congress felt that listing was fundamentally a scientific question - Is the continuation of the species in jeopardy?

Convention on International Trade on Endangered Species (CITES)  At least 126 signatory countries  Goal to regulate the complex wildlife trade by controlling species-specific trade levels on the basis of biological criteria – 900 species - trade prohibited – 5,000 animals & 28,000 plants trade regulated

IUCN  The International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources is a network of 500 governmental and nongovernmental organizations from 116 countries, joined together to promote the protection and sustainable use of living resources

IUCN  One of its primary functions is to monitor the status of ecosystems and species throughout the world  “Red Data Books” – global catalogs of threatened organisms – www.redlist.org IUCN  Data from which the listings are made are gathered from literature searches and from correspondence with specialists around the world – Based on this information species are assigned to categories

Issues  Difficulties in making assessments of endangerment  What about naturally rare species?

Instrumental values  All food is biodiversity!

Bushmeat

Potential food  As many as 80,000 edible wild plant species could be utilized by humans

Genetic material

Medicine  More than half of all prescriptions contain some natural product  Pharmaceutical companies actively prospect tropical countries for products - ethnobotany

Silphion  Contraceptive properties  Worth more than its weight in silver

Clothing, shelter, tools, trinkets, fuel

Services  Use of resources without physically extracting/degrading them – Photosynthesis, pollination, soil formation, waste disposal, air and water purification, nutrient cycling, etc. all depend on biodiversity

Recreation  USFWS estimates Americans spend $104 billion annually on wildlife- related recreation

Psycho-Spiritual  “Biophilia” - E.O. Wilson  Aesthetic reasons  Existence value

Scientific/educational values Ecological values  Dominant and controller species play important roles in ecosystems  Ecological extinction can occur if species does not have high enough numbers to fill its role in an ecosystem

Keystone species

Precautionary principle  Assume all species are important until proven otherwise

Are all species equal in conservation?

Strategic species

Flagship species

Umbrella species

Indicator species

Vulnerable species

Economically important species

Realized vs. potential value  Thermus aquaticus  Yew

Uniqueness value