🐼Conservation Biology Unit 7 – Extinction: Causes and Prevention
Extinction, the permanent loss of species, occurs naturally but has accelerated due to human activities. From mass extinctions in Earth's history to current threats like habitat loss and climate change, the causes are diverse. Understanding extinction patterns helps prioritize conservation efforts.
Conservation strategies aim to prevent extinctions through protected areas, captive breeding, and habitat restoration. Success stories like the Arabian Oryx show that dedicated efforts can save species from the brink. Future challenges include addressing root causes and integrating conservation with sustainable development.
Extinction is the permanent loss of a species from Earth
Occurs when the last individual of a species dies without producing offspring
Results in the irreversible loss of unique evolutionary lineages and genetic diversity
Can be caused by natural factors (climate change, asteroid impacts) or human activities (habitat destruction, overhunting)
Differs from extirpation, which is the local disappearance of a species from a specific area while still existing elsewhere
Background extinction rate is the natural rate at which species go extinct over geological time
Estimated at 1-5 species per year based on fossil record
Mass extinctions are periods of significantly elevated extinction rates compared to background levels (End-Permian extinction, K-Pg extinction)
Historical Extinctions
Extinctions have occurred throughout Earth's history, with five major mass extinction events in the past 540 million years
End-Ordovician (444 million years ago): 85% of species lost
Late Devonian (375 million years ago): 75% of species lost
End-Permian (252 million years ago): 96% of species lost
End-Triassic (201 million years ago): 80% of species lost
End-Cretaceous (66 million years ago): 76% of species lost, including non-avian dinosaurs
Pleistocene megafauna extinctions occurred during the last ice age (130,000-11,700 years ago)
Large mammals like mammoths, ground sloths, and sabertooth cats went extinct
Causes debated, but likely a combination of climate change and human hunting
Holocene extinctions have accelerated in the past 10,000 years due to human activities
Examples include the dodo (Mauritius), passenger pigeon (North America), and thylacine (Tasmania)
Major Causes of Extinction
Habitat loss and fragmentation due to human land use (agriculture, urbanization, deforestation)
Reduces available space and resources for species
Isolates populations, reducing gene flow and increasing vulnerability to stochastic events
Overexploitation through hunting, fishing, and collecting
Can drive species to critically low population levels (whales, sharks, elephants)
Invasive species introduced by humans can outcompete or prey upon native species
Examples include brown tree snakes (Guam), Nile perch (Lake Victoria), and feral cats (islands worldwide)
Pollution and environmental toxins can cause direct mortality or reduce reproductive success
Pesticides (DDT), oil spills, and plastic debris are common pollutants affecting wildlife
Climate change driven by anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions
Alters temperature, precipitation, and sea level, forcing species to adapt or shift ranges
Ocean acidification from absorbed CO2 threatens coral reefs and marine organisms with calcium carbonate shells
Synergistic effects of multiple threats can amplify extinction risk
Extinction Rates and Patterns
Current extinction rates are estimated to be 100-1000 times higher than background rates
Described as the "sixth mass extinction" or Anthropocene extinction
Species-area relationship predicts that habitat loss will lead to predictable levels of extinction
Losing 90% of habitat is expected to result in 50% of species going extinct
Extinction debt is the time lag between habitat loss and the eventual extinction of species
Populations may persist for a time in remnant patches before ultimately disappearing
Extinction risk is not evenly distributed across taxa
Amphibians, reptiles, and freshwater fish are particularly threatened
Island species are more vulnerable due to limited ranges and naive to introduced predators
Extinction cascades can occur when the loss of a keystone species triggers further extinctions
Sea otters maintain kelp forests by controlling sea urchin populations
Endangered Species and Red Lists
Endangered species are those at risk of extinction in the near future
IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) maintains the Red List of Threatened Species
Categorizes species based on extinction risk: Least Concern, Near Threatened, Vulnerable, Endangered, Critically Endangered, Extinct in the Wild, Extinct
Assessments based on population size, geographic range, and rate of decline
National and regional endangered species lists also exist (U.S. Endangered Species Act, China's National Key Protected Wild Plants List)
Red Lists help prioritize conservation efforts and allocate resources to the most threatened species
Limitations of Red Lists include taxonomic bias (charismatic megafauna), data deficiency, and political boundaries
Shifting baseline syndrome can mask long-term declines and lead to underestimation of extinction risk
Conservation Strategies
Protected areas like national parks and wildlife reserves
Safeguard critical habitat and reduce human pressures
Ex-situ conservation maintains captive populations in zoos, aquariums, and seed banks as a backup
Habitat restoration and connectivity
Reestablishing degraded ecosystems and creating wildlife corridors between fragments
Captive breeding and reintroduction programs
Recovering species from brink of extinction (California condor, black-footed ferret)
Genetic management to minimize inbreeding and maintain adaptive potential
Invasive species control and eradication
Removing or suppressing invasive populations to relieve pressure on native species
Sustainable use and community-based conservation
Engaging local communities in conservation efforts and providing economic incentives (ecotourism, sustainable harvesting)
International agreements and legislation
CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) regulates wildlife trade
Migratory Bird Treaty Act and Endangered Species Act in the United States
Case Studies in Extinction Prevention
Arabian Oryx rescued from extinction through captive breeding and reintroduction
Hunted to extinction in the wild by 1972, but saved by coordinated ex-situ and in-situ efforts
Black-footed Ferret recovery in North America
Captive breeding program established from last 18 individuals, reintroduced to prairie dog colonies
Mauritius Kestrel and Pink Pigeon saved from brink of extinction
Intensive management and habitat restoration on Mauritius, a biodiversity hotspot
Yellowstone Wolf reintroduction and trophic cascades
Extirpated from the park in 1926, reintroduced in 1995 with far-reaching ecological effects
Seychelles Magpie-Robin recovered through translocation and habitat management
Population bottlenecked at 12-15 individuals, but successful conservation efforts led to downlisting
Future Challenges and Opportunities
Addressing the underlying drivers of extinction (human population growth, overconsumption, climate change)
Incorporating climate change projections into conservation planning and assisted migration
Expanding the protected area network and improving management effectiveness
Filling knowledge gaps through biodiversity inventories and monitoring, especially in understudied regions and taxa
Harnessing new technologies like eDNA, remote sensing, and gene editing for conservation
Engaging the public and fostering a culture of conservation through education and outreach
Developing innovative funding mechanisms (carbon credits, biodiversity offsets) and partnerships with the private sector
Integrating conservation with sustainable development goals to balance human well-being and biodiversity protection