predation.
Predator-prey relationships
Stage one
An increase in the prey population provides more food for the predators, allowing more to survive and reproduce. This in turn results in an increase in the predator population.
Stage two -
The increased predator population eats more prey organisms, causing a decline in the prey population. The death rate of the prey population is greater than its birth rate.
Stage three
The reduced prey population can no longer support the large predator population.
Intraspecific competition for food increases, resulting in a decrease in the size of the predator population.
Stage four
Canadian lynx and snowshoe hare
Conservation
reclamation
Preservation
Conservation of gray bats
Importance of conservation economic
to provide resources that humans need to survive and to provide an income. For example, rainforest species provide medicinal drugs, clothes, and food that can be traded.
Other forests are used for the production of timber and paper
Importance of conservation social
many people enjoy the natural beauty of wild ecosystems as well as using them for activities which are beneficial to health by providing a means of relaxation and exercise.
Examples of these activities include bird watching, walking, cycling, and climbing.
Importance of conservation ethical
all organisms have a right to exist, and most play an important role within their ecosystem. Many people believe that we should not have the right to decide which organisms can survive, and which we could live without.
We also have a moral responsibility for future generations to conserve the wide variety of existing natural ecosystems.
24.5 Sustainability
Specification reference: 6.3.2
Sustainable use of resources
The aims of sustainability are to:
• preserve the environment
• ensure resources are available for future generations
• allow humans in all societies to live comfortably
• enable less economically developed countries (LEDCs) to develop, through exploiting their natural resources
• create a more even balance in the consumption of these resources between more economically developed countries (MEDCs) and LEDCs.
Sustainable timber production
The sustainable management of forests is possible. This allows for the maintenance of a forest’s biodiversity, while sustaining both our supply of wood to meet demands and the economic viability of timber production.
The techniques used depend on the scale of timber production.
Small-scale timber production
Large-scale timber production
Sustainable timber production on a large scale is based around the technique of felling large areas of forest. The felled trees are destroyed and will not regrow.
To ensure that production is sustainable, timber companies:
To ensure that production is sustainable, timber companies:
• Practise selective cutting, which involves removing only the largest trees.
• Replace trees through replanting rather than waiting for natural regeneration. This also helps to ensure that the biodiversity and mineral and water cycles are maintained.
• Plant trees an optimal distance apart to reduce competition. This results in higher yields as more wood is produced per tree.
Manage pests and pathogens to maximise yields.
• Ensure that areas of forest remain for indigenous people.
major disadvantage of large scale timber production technique is
that habitats are destroyed, soil minerals are reduced, and the bare soil which is left is susceptible to erosion. Trees are important for binding soil together, removing water from soil, and maintaining nutrient levels through their role in the carbon and nitrogen cycles.
Sustainable fishing