define conservation biology
applied scientific discipline seeking to counter biodiversity loss
- response of biologists to anthropogenic impacts on natural world
what are the 3 components of conservation biology?
and what is it concerned with?
give 2 examples of how you may quantify loss and impacts
give 2 examples of identifying causal mechanisms
explain protected area gap analysis and skylark plots as examples of devising strategies to reduce impacts
what is the noble savage concept?
in ancestral times was believed there was harmony between humans and nature but incorrect
- lower pop density= fewer resources= resource overuse= damage to natural world
give 2 examples of the noble savage concept
what 3 main conclusions can be made from the noble savage concept?
why has the time taken to add 1 billion to a pop decreased and what is it thought the pop will stabilise at by the end of the century?
rapid pop growth
10 billion
how does human pop growth and resource use lead to loss of biodiversity?
more industry, agriculture, fisheries, forestry leading to land use and cover change, altered bio geochemical cycles, natural compounds harvested, biological invasion
what is crisp discipline?
response to rapid biodiversity loss
what other disciplines may need to be applied when identifying causal mechanisms to reduce impacts and what needs to be taken into account?
economic and social science
need to take local peoples attitudes into account and their say over the situation
whats the relationship between rate of biodiversity loss and knowledge gain?
rate of biodiversity loss > rate of knowledge gain
give 3 points about biofuels
what is the kakapo example?
what was the romantic transcendental ethic in 1850s and who were the leaders?
leaders: John muir, Henry throeu, Ralph Emerson
- semi religious idea
- believed in preservation and leaving the world untouched
- not economically value focused
- led to Sierra club,, preservationist movement, Yosemite, national park
what is the resource conservation ethic in 1900s and who were the leaders?
leaders: John mill, gifford Pinchot, teddy roosevelt
- practical approach
- aligned with ecosystem service approach
- aim to protect nature due to economic reasons
- led to multiple use concept
what is the evolutionary ecological land ethic?
when was the first modern conservation biology textbook published and by who?
1980- Soule and Wilcox
what 2 reasons are there for why we select conservation units?
how much money is actually spent on global conservation and what is the required spend fo James et al and McCarthy et al?
James: $27.5 billion required $6 billion actual (20%)
McCarthy: $78 billion required actual 10% of this
define biodiversity
the variability among living organisms within species, between species and of ecosystems