4.2.2-.4 causes of extinction

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4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

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4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction. EXTINCT is FOREVER!!. Non-human causes of extinction:. Volcanic events Ocean temperature change Sea level changes Meteorites Glaciations Global climate change Competition/predation. Human causes of extinction/loss of biodiversity - HIPPO. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Page 2: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

EXTINCT is FOREVER!!

Page 3: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Non-human causes of extinction:Volcanic eventsOcean temperature changeSea level changesMeteoritesGlaciationsGlobal climate changeCompetition/predation

Page 4: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Human causes of extinction/loss of biodiversity - HIPPOHabitat destruction and fragmentation

Introduced speciesPollutionPopulation Over consumption

Page 5: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Rates of Extinction: = number of species becoming extinct per unit time.

Rates of extinction are very difficult to estimate, because we don't even know within an order of magnitude how many species there are.

Fossil records can reveal the average "lifetimes" of species, or how long different classes of plants and animals generally exist on the earth before going extinct.

Page 6: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

From this information, scientists can determine a "background" rate of extinction, or the natural rate of extinction without human intervention.

Because of human intervention the Earth's species are dying out at an alarming rate, up to 1,000 times faster than their natural rate of extinction.

Page 7: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

By carefully examining fossil records and ecosystem destruction, some scientists estimate that as many as 137 species disappear from the Earth EACH DAY, which adds up to an astounding 50,000 species disappearing every year.

Page 8: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

The Earth has experienced 5 MASS EXTINCTIONS

Page 9: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Mammals average species lifespan 1 million years.

With ~ 5,000 mammalian species the background extinction rate = 1 every 200 years.

In the past 400 years, though, 89 extinctions have been recorded, almost 45 times the natural rate.

Over 50 of those extinctions have occurred in the past century,

Rate = 100 times the background rate!!

Page 10: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Extinction Rates over geological time

Page 11: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Middle Cambrian age (about 540 million years ago) •The locality is special because of the soft-bodied preservation of a wide diversity of fossil invertebrate animals. •Period of great speciation.

Page 12: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Characteristics of vulnerable speciesSmall population size - island species.

Small population size - species with limited habitats.

Extremely specialized species.Species with low reproductive potential.

Species that require large territories.

Species with limited dispersal ability.

Page 13: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Vulnerable species - continuedMigratory species.Species that are economically valuable or hunted for sport

Predators.Species that are vulnerable to pollution.

Species that are incompatible with civilization.

Page 14: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

RainforestTropical rainforests contain at least half of the

Earth's species. Most species have evolved to inhabit very

specialized niches in their environment.When humans disrupt that environment, many

species cannot survive. Because species depend on each other in a

complicated web of relationships, changing just one part of that web harms the entire ecosystem.

This breakdown of rainforest ecosystems will likely lead to the disappearance of up to 10% of the world's species within the next 25 years.

Page 15: 4.2.2-.4 Causes of Extinction

Rainforest continuedThe human species depends on the

rainforest's millions of life forms for its own existence -

The genetic diversity found within the rainforests provides invaluable additions to the gene pool which help maintain and improve domestic crops.

Without a diversity of strains, crops become overly homogenous and vulnerable to mass blight.

Many medicines that we regularly use come from rainforest species.