“The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

83

Transcript of “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Page 1: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 2: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

“The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles awayhttp://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=2148

Page 3: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.solstation.com/stars/earth.htm http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/photo_gallery/photogallery-mars.html

Page 4: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 5: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.thew2o.net/#

Page 6: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.misterteacher.com/rainforestwebquest.html

Page 7: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.misterteacher.com/rainforestwebquest.html

Earth Mars

CO2 0.035% 95%

N2 77% 2.7%

H2O 1% 0.007%

Ar 0.93% 1.6%

O2 21% trace

Page 8: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://science.kennesaw.edu/~jdirnber/BioOceanography/Lectures/LecPhysicalOcean/LecPhysicalOcean.html

Page 9: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 10: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 11: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Earth History

4.5

bya:

Ear

th F

orm

s

4.0

bya:

Old

est

Roc

ks3.

4 by

a: O

ldes

t F

ossi

ls

2.3-

2.0

bya:

Oxy

gen

1.8

bya:

firs

t eu

kary

ote

0.9

bya:

firs

t an

imal

s

0.5

bya:

Cam

bria

n0.

24 b

ya:M

esoz

oic

0.06

5 by

a:C

enoz

oic

4.5 million to present

(1/1000th of earth history)

Page 12: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

All genera

“well described” genera

The “big five” Mass Extinction Events

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Phanerozoic_biodiversity_blank_01.png

Millions of Years Ago

Th

ou

san

ds

of

Gen

era

Page 13: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Permian mass extinction: 96% of all marine species and 70% of terrestrial vertebrate species

(% o

f G

ener

a)

Page 14: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

WHY?

Page 15: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

WHY?

Page 16: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

WHY?

Page 17: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

WHY?

Page 18: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

WHY?

Page 19: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 20: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/prehistoric-world/mass-extinction/

Page 21: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://we.vub.ac.be/~dglg/Web/Claeys/Chicxulub/Chixproject.html

ecological collapse

Almost all animals over 25kg (~55 lbs) went extinct.

(The things that require the most energy to survive)

Page 22: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

BIODIVERSITY NOW

http://www.coral.org/node/3230

Page 23: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Millenium Ecosystem Assessment (2006)

http://englishontour.blogspot.com/2011/03/beetles.html

Page 24: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.illuminatedorigin.com/The_Illuminated_Origin_of_Species/Blog/Entries/2011/9/22_Beetles!.html

http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/jcabbott/abbottlab/

DetritivoresPollinatorsInsect predatorsHerbivores

Page 25: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.dendroboard.com/forum/photography/42636-incredible-costa-rican-euglossine-bees.html

PollinatorsInsect Parasitoids (lay eggs on other insects)Insect Predators

Page 26: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Malagasy Sunset Butterfly

Jewel Bug

http://magicbelles.com/flutterbudclub/special-wonders/beetles

http://buggirl.tumblr.com/post/12568644622/bugs-that-break-the-rules-the-madagascar-sunsethttp://www.brisbaneinsects.com/brisbane_flies/images/PWC_8410.jpg

HerbivoresPollinatorsParasitesDetritivores

Page 27: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.trekearth.com/gallery/Africa/South_Africa/West/Eastern_Cape/Kob_Inn/photo915391.htm

HerbivoresDetritivores

Page 28: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.paulsanghera.com/infonential-Contact.html

http://www.flowersociety.org/Redwood-profile.htm

PRODUCERS

Page 29: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Most vertebrate species are fishes

http://www.elp.manchester.ac.uk/pub_projects/2003/MNZO0MLK/lecture1.htm

Page 30: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/life/Blue_Whale

http://freakz.info/2011/09/21/10-interesting-seahorse-facts/

http://ambergriscaye.com/critters/redeyedtreefrog.html

http://www.hodag.info/what%E2%80%99s-going-on-here-then-100

http://australian-animals.net/plat.htm

http://www.pbase.com/image/37557333

Herbivores, Predators, Detritivores, Pollinators

Page 31: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

But do we NEED all these species??

Page 32: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://katherinegerdes.com/portfolio/11/rainy-day-jewels

There’s a lot of redundancy in nature…

Page 33: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Are all species equally important? If not, which ones are critical?

Page 34: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

with

without

Page 35: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We don’t know which species are critical

So we need to save them all to maintain ecosystem function

Page 36: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

But what does biodiversity do??

Page 37: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

1) Biodiversity increases “productivity” ... FOOD

Page 38: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Monoculture

They all need the same things at the same concentrations; they compete.

Page 39: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Monoculture Polyculture

Combinations of different plants can be planted at higher density, and they use different "niches" and coexist. Even if abundance of "most productive" species drops, this loss can be offset.

They all need the same things at the same concentrations; they compete.

“Niche Complementarity”

Page 40: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Monoculture Polyculture

Nitrogen fixing legumes (beans) nutrify the soil, increasing the growth of other plants. And you have beans!

without beans

with beansThey all need the same things at

the same concentrations; they compete.

“Positive Effects”

Page 41: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

2) Biodiversity improves ecosystem services

Estimates of various Ecosystem Services - $U.S. trillionsEcosystem services

Value(trillion $US)

Soil formation 17.1Recreation 3.0Nutrient cycling 2.3Water regulation and supply

2.3

Climate regulation (temperature and precipitation)

1.8

Habitat 1.4Flood and storm protection

1.1

Food and raw materials production

0.8

Genetic resources 0.8Atmospheric gas balance 0.7Pollination 0.4All other services 1.6Total value of ecosystem services

33.3

Source: Adapted from R. Costanza et al., “The Value of the World’s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital,” Nature, Vol. 387 (1997), p. 256, Table 2. TOTAL GLOBAL GNP (1997) = 18 trillion.

Page 42: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

3) Aesthetics and Inspiration: Biodiversity enriches our cultures

Page 43: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

3) Aesthetics and Inspiration: Biodiversity enriches our cultures

Page 44: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

How is our biodiversity doing?

Genetic diversity within species

Species diversity in communities

Ecosystem diversity

Page 45: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

How is our biodiversity doing? Humans used hundreds of crop species worldwide; now 3 species (rice, wheat, corn) provide 60% of our calories from crop plants.

According to the FAO of the UN, 70% of the genetic diversity of crop plants has been lost in the last 75 years as we’ve shifted to industrial farming and the use of GM strains.

Page 46: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

How is our biodiversity doing?

2000 Pacific Island bird species (15% of global total) have gone extinct after human colonization

20 of the 297 mussel species in N.A. have gone extinct in the last 100 years; 60% are endangered

40 of 950 fish species in N. A. have gone extinct in the last century; 35% are threatened or endangered

http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/pub/the-real-biodiversity-crisis/1

http://www.nps.gov/sacn/planyourvisit/st-croix-currents.htm?customel_dataPageID_206517=289024

http://www.fishdecoys.net/pages/LDC_Collection/BenzieJoDecoys.htm

Yellow-finned cutthroat trout

Page 47: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

How is our biodiversity doing?

1 in 4 mammal species is endangered

1 in 8 bird species is endangered

1 in 3 amphibian species is endangered

48% of primate species are threatened

Data from: http://iucn.org/what/tpas/biodiversity/

Page 48: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

How is our biodiversity doing?

35% of mangrove habitat has been lost in the last 20 years

In the Caribbean, hard coral cover has declined from 50% to 10% in the last 20 years

Since 2000, 232,000 sq miles of old growth forest have been lost (size of Texas).

Page 49: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 50: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

WHY?

Page 51: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

7 billion in 2011 (12 years later)

Page 52: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://news.mongabay.com/2011/1009-amazon_deforestation_revised.html

13,000 sq kilometers is about the size of Connecticut

Page 53: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

http://mvh.sr.unh.edu/mvhinvestigations/old_growth_forests.htm

Extent of Virgin Forest, Contiguous U. S.

Page 54: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 55: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Millenium Assessment 2006

Page 56: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

1

10 million?

Humans use/control 40% of the ‘food’ produced on the planet.

Page 57: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Fragmentation

Page 58: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

PLANTS

HERBIVORES

CARNIVORES

LARGE AREA OF HABITAT

Area Effects

Fragmentation

Page 59: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

HABITAT FRAGMENTATION

Fragmentation

Page 60: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

HABITAT FRAGMENTATION

Fragmentation

1)Carnivores lost - (reduce diversity)2)Herbivores compete – (reduce diversity)3)Plants overgrazed – (reduce diversity)

Page 61: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We are a geological force, operating on an ecological timescale

Mountaintop removal in West Virginia

Page 62: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We are a geological force, operating on an ecological timescale

Gold mining in Peruvian Amazon

Page 63: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We are a geological force, operating on an ecological timescale

Page 64: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We are a geological force, operating on an ecological timescale

Page 65: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We are a geological force, operating on an ecological timescale

Hmmmm….

Page 66: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

All genera

“well described” genera

The “big five” Mass Extinction Events

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Phanerozoic_biodiversity_blank_01.png

Millions of Years Ago

Th

ou

san

ds

of

Gen

era

Sixth major mass extinction event - NOW

Page 67: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

22 May 2010 –Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon:

“Biodiversity loss is moving ecological systems ever closer to a tipping point beyond which they will no longer be able to fulfill their vital functions.”

Page 68: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

What Can We Do?

We need to protect and preserve large intact, biodiverse ecosystems.

Page 69: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

This is great, but it ain’t gonna do it…

Page 70: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 71: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We need to rethink our model of community…

Development

nature

nature

Development

Development

Development

Page 72: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We need to find out what’s out there!

Page 73: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

We need to appreciate the societal and economic value of biodiversity

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)http://www.justmeans.com/Stop-Loss-CSR-Biodiversity/28856.html

“Protection of biodiversity should be the underlying reason for every CSR effort. Biodiversity loss is the most severe threat to human-wellbeing on the planet. It rates even higher than climate change and related problems….

The head of Deutsche Bank's Global Markets predicts that our current rate of biodiversity loss could see 6% of global GDP wiped out as early as 2050.

The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity executive summary (2010) reports that “over 50% of CEOs surveyed in Latin America and 45% in Africa see declines in biodiversity as a challenge to business growth. In contrast, less than 20% of their counterparts in Western Europe share such concerns”

Page 74: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .
Page 75: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

If we recognize the grandeur of life, we might appreciate it…

Page 76: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

If we appreciate it, we might value it…

Page 77: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

If we value it, we might sustain it…

Page 78: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

If we sustain it, we might be able to sustain our societies and economies, as well.

ECONOMY

SOCIETY

ENVIRONMENT

Page 79: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

If we don’t, we won’t…

A few extinct animal species.

Thylacine - 1936

Quogga - 1883

Golden Toad - 1989

Tecopa Pupfish - 1981

Yangtze River Dolphin - 2006

Vietnamese Rhinoceros - 2010

Page 80: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Study questions:

In what two major ways does the earth differ from Mars?

How have each of these differences influenced the dramatic loss of CO2 from the earth atmosphere, relative to Mars?

Dinosaurs went extinct because a meteor struck the earth and caused an ‘ecological catastrophe’ in which the animals with the greatest energy demand went extinct. Why is humanity similarly vulnerable with respect to the amount of resources we use, and the range of food we consume?

What are the two main ways that we are causing the extinction of other organisms?

Why is maintaining diversity important?

(Brief answers on the next slides – try them yourselves first!!!!)

Page 81: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Study questions:

In what two major ways does the earth differ from Mars?

Lots of liquid water at the surface, and the presence of life.

How have each of these differences influenced the dramatic loss of CO2 from the earth atmosphere, relative to Mars?

First, CO2 dissolves in water. Then, it is available to organisms that make shells and reefs out of calcium carbonate. This material accumulates as sedimentary deposits (Cliffs of Dover) in the lithosphere. Likewise, the evolution of photosynthesis (specifically the ‘light independent reaction’) allow CO2 in the atmosphere to be stored as glucose, cellulose, and other organic molecules. Although respiration and decomposition would return CO2 to the atmosphere, much of the organic remains have been preserved as fossil fuel deposits in sedimentary rocks – again representing a transfer of CO2 from the atmosphere to the lithosphere, mediated by living organisms.

Page 82: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Study questions:

Dinosaurs went extinct because a meteor struck the earth and caused an ‘ecological catastrophe’ in which the animals with the greatest energy demand went extinct. Why is humanity similarly vulnerable with respect to the amount of resources we use, and the range of food we consume?

We use 40% of the food produced on land. If there was an ecological catastrophe that reduced food production, we would feel it worse than other species. In addition, we get 60% of our calories from just three species!!! So, if a calamity befalls any of these three species, we will feel it.

What are the three main ways that we are causing the extinction of other organisms?

1.Competition – we are consuming most the food.2.This is largely by changing their habitats (prairie, forest, etc.) into our agricultural land.3.Changing the climate faster than it has changed before, and faster than many species can adapt.

Why is maintaining diversity important?

Page 83: “The pale blue dot” …. Earth from the Voyager spacecraft, > 4 billion miles away .

Study questions:

Why is maintaining diversity important?

Natural ecosystems provide ‘services’ upon which humanity depends, such as making food, cleaning the air, cleaning the water, stabilizing the climate, and fertilizing the soil. Ecology has shown that more diverse systems are more effective and efficient at performing these functions. Although there is redundancy in nature, we don’t yet know which species are the key ‘drivers’ of ecosystem function. As such, in order to maintain ecosystem function, we must ‘keep all the pieces’. As the percentage of endangered species in different groups shows, we aren’t doing such a great job at this.

BUT! The first step in solving a problem is identifying it. Now we know. Now we must act.