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Conservation and restoration ecology

Hank discusses different types of biodiversity, as well as how biodiversity can be measured, preserved, and restored. Created by EcoGeek.

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  • piceratops tree style avatar for user egrossman19
    At Hank sites Cane Toads as an example of humans introducing a new animal into an ecosystem with horrible consequences. Are there any examples of good invasive species which have benefited an ecosystem? And, on an unrelated side note, is there a bacteria/archae/protist that is capable of turning Co2 into oxygen and organic carbon?
    (6 votes)
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  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Tina D.
    Can someone please explain the difference between conservation and restoration ecology along with some examples?
    (4 votes)
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    • leafers ultimate style avatar for user Justin
      Conservation means to preserve something that is already there while restoration means to restore something lost. An example of conservation ecology would be U.S Forestry service applying ecological knowledge to understand how to prevent species extinction in Yellowstone State park. While an example of restoration ecology would be the U.S Forestry service using ecological knowledge to understand the best way to clean up after a wildfire in Yellowstone State Park.
      (5 votes)
  • female robot grace style avatar for user Lit Girl
    Which country is devoting, or spending the most on conservation as well as restoration ecology?
    (2 votes)
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  • leaf green style avatar for user Ella
    what is an adaptation that organisms in the aphotic zone might have?
    (4 votes)
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  • purple pi purple style avatar for user Residuum
    At "" It is said that they removed all the toxic sediment. What exactly did they do with it? Is it processed to remove the toxins or simply moved somewhere else?
    (4 votes)
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  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Hazle
    How long does it take to restore an ecosystem? Because it is so big, it will take lots of people, but in my experience, people don't care a lot about ecosystem. (I don't mean to be pestimistic, I support saving ecosystems)
    (1 vote)
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    • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Amanda Moore
      The first step to a restoration is to stop the damage that is being done, and we are currently having quite a bit of trouble doing that. 1 in every 4 Americans, for example, don't believe in global warming. And even people who do believe in global warming often believe that we shouldn't change our ways, because it will be too expensive.
      Restoration is very important, but if we can't get the people in charge to acknowledge that they are killing the ecosystems, then we won't ever be able to restore them.
      (4 votes)
  • aqualine seed style avatar for user Layla Silvers
    at wouldnt the ice break the dam anyway so it looked to me either way the fish would die?
    (1 vote)
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    • male robot johnny style avatar for user daniel calkin
      the ice would have to be an extremely low temperature to pierce the dam, freeze the water in the dam, then expand like frozen water does. Like temperatures not found on earth. This is just suggesting the concrete in the dam is at least 6 feet wide (2 meters). which it was probably thicker.
      (1 vote)
  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user rayhanmunim
    At Hank sites Cane Toads as an example of humans introducing a new animal into an ecosystem with horrible consequences. Are there any examples of good invasive species which have benefited an ecosystem? And, on an unrelated side note, is there a bacteria/archae/protist that is capable of turning Co2 into oxygen and organic carbon?
    (1 vote)
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    • leaf green style avatar for user Jacob Zammito
      I suggest to Distinguish between the term "exotic species": (something that came from somewhere else) and the term "invasive exotic"; (something that came from somewhere else and is a problem when out of place, an exotic that puts a system out of balance. Not all exotics become invasive. Some are termed "nusance" when they are just a little detrimental, but not to the point of being invasive. And there are some introduced species that are benign, they do no harm. Some spread have become "naturalized" where they do fit in to the community without creating a problem. The best example i can think of is the european Honeybees which are NOt native to North America. There are native bees, but they are not honey bees. A european honey bee hive living in a tree on its own in the woods without being tended by a human is considered a "ferril" hive rather than a "wild" hive, Because it is still an introduced species, but not an invasive? Not there are only so many flowers at one time, so there CAN be competition between the honeybees and native bees over limited resources. But overall honeybees are beneficial. To look a step further, there have been detrimental genes from introduced varieties of african honey bees that cause the behavior of honeybees to be a nuance. But this is just an example. But if you don't understand what you are doing introducing a new species can mess up an ecosystem easier than it can help it.
      (1 vote)
  • leafers tree style avatar for user Nicole Olson
    This question was possibly already asked... But what did they do with the water from the dam? Did they treat it a specific way? Or was their main concern the sediment?
    (0 votes)
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Video transcript

- For the past 12 weeks we've been investigating our living planet together, learning how it works on many levels, how populations of organisms interact, how communities thrive and ecosystems change and how humans are wrecking the nice, perfectly functioning systems Earth has been using for hundreds of thousands of years. And now it's graduation day. This here is like a commencement speech, where I talk to you about the future and our role in it and how what we're doing to the planet is totally awful, but we're taking steps to undo some of the damage that we've done. So what better way to wrap up our series on ecology than by taking a look at the growing fields of conservation biology and restoration ecology. These just blends all the kung fu moves that we've learned about in the past 11 weeks and apply them to protecting ecosystems and cleaning up the messes that we've already made. And one of the main things they teach us is that doing these things is difficult, like in the way that uncooking bacon is difficult. So let's look at what we're doing, and try to uncook this unbelievably large pile of bacon that we've made. (upbeat music) Just outside of Missoula, Montana where I live, we've got a superfund site. Not super fun, superfund. A hazardous waste site that the government is in charge of cleaning up. The mess here was made more than 100 years ago, when there was a dam in the Clark Fork River behind me, called the Milltown Dam. The part of Montana has a long history of copper mining, and back in 1908, there was a humongous flood that washed about 4.5 mullion cubic meters of mine tailings, chock full of arsinic and toxic heavy metals into the Clark Fork River. And most of it washed into the reservoir created by the Milltown Dam. I mean, actually it was lucky that the dam was there, it'd only been completed six months before, or the whole river system all the way to the Pacific Ocean would have been a toxic mess. As it happened though, only about 160 kilometers of the river was all toxic messed up. A lot of it recuperated over time, but all that nasty, hazardous waste was still sitting behind Milltown Dam, and some of it leached into the groundwater that started polluting nearby residents' wells. So scientists spent decades studying the extent of the damage caused by the waste and coming up with ways to fix it. And from 2006 to 2010 engineers carefully removed all the toxic sediment as well as the dam itself. Now, this stretch of the Clark Fork river runs unimpeded for the first time in over a century, and the restored area where the dam used to be, is being turned into a State Park. Efforts like this how us conservation biology and restoration ecology in action. Conservation biology involves measuring the biodiversity of an ecosystem and determining how to protect it, in this case, it was used to size up the health of fish populations in the Clark Fork River which were severely affected by the waste behind the dam and the dam blocking their access to spawning grounds upstream. And figuring out how to protect them during the dam's removal. Restoration ecology meanwhile, is the science of restoring broken ecosystems like taking an interrupted, polluted river and turning it into what you see taking shape here. These do gooder fix it up sciences are practical rather than theoretical, by which I mean in order to fix something that's broken, you've got to have good idea of what's making it work to begin with. If something goes wrong with the expansion of the universe, we wouldn't be able to fix it, because we have no idea at all what's making all that happen. So in order to fix a failing ecosystem, you have to figure out what was holding it together in the first place and the glue that holds every ecosystem together is biodiversity. But then of course, biodiversity can mean many different things. So far we've generally used it to mean species diversity, or the variety of species in an ecosystem. But there are also other ways of talking about biodiversity that help conservation biologists and restoration ecologists figure out how to save species and repair ecosystems. In addition to the diversity of species, ecologists look at diversity within the species as whole and between populations. Genetic diversity is important because it makes evolution possible by allowing the species to adapt to new situations like disease and climate change, and then another level of biodiversity has to do with ecosystem diversity or the variety of different ecosystems within an area. A big old forest for example, can host several different kinds of ecosystems like wetland, alpine and aquatic ones. Just like we talked about when we covered ecological succession, the more little pockets you've got performing different functions, the more resilient the region will be as a whole. So yeah, understanding all of this is really important to figuring out how to repair an ecosystem that is in shambles. But how do conservation biologists take the information about what makes an ecosystem tick and use it to save the place from going under. Well, there's more than one way to approach this problem. One way is called small population conservation. This approach focuses on identifying species and populations that are really small, and tries to help boost their numbers and genetic diversity. Low population and low genetic diversity are kind of a death nail for a species that actually feed off each other, one problem making the other problem worse, ultimately causing a species to spiral into extinction. See, when a tiny little population suffers from inbreeding or genetic drift, that is a shift in its overall genetic makeup, this leads to even less diversity, which in turn causes lower reproduction rates and higher mortality rates which makes the population smaller still. This terrible little dynamic is known by the awesome term extinction vortex. The next step is to figure out how small of a population is too small. Ecologists do this by calculating what's called the minimum viable population, which is the smallest size in which a population can survive and sustain itself. To get at this number you have to know the real breeding population of say grizzly bears in Yellowstone National Park, and then you figure out everything you can about a grizzly's life history. How long they live, who gets to breed the most, how often they can have babies, that kind of thing. After all the information is collected, ecologists can run the numbers and figure out for the grizzlies in Yellowstone a population of say, hypothetically 90 bears would have a 95 percent chance of surviving for 100 years. But if there were a population of 100 bears, the population would likely be able to survive for 200 years. Something to note, ecology involves a lot of math, so if you're interested in this, that's just the way it is. So that's the small population approach to conservation. Another way of preserving biodiversity focuses on populations whose numbers are in decline, no matter how large the original population was. This is known as declining population conservation and it involves answering a series of related questions that get the root of what's causing an organism's numbers to nosedive. First you have to determine whether the population's actually declining, then you have to figure out how big the population historically was and what its requirements were, and finally you have to get at what's causing the decline and figure out how to address it. Milltown Dam actually gives us a good example of this process in the winter of 1996 authorities had to release some of the water behind the dam, as an emergency measure because of a big ice flow in the river that was threatening to break the dam. But when they released the water, a bunch of toxic sediment went with it, which raised the copper concentrations downriver to almost 43 times what state standards allowed. As a result, it's estimated that about half of the fish downstream died. Half of the fish. Dead. And researches have been monitoring the decline in populations ever since. This information was really helpful in determining what to do with the dam because we knew what the fish population was like before and after the release of the sediment. It was decided that it would be best to get the dam out as soon as possible, rather than risk another 1996 scenario. Which brings me to place where conservation biology and restoration ecology intersect. Restoration ecology is kinda where the rubber meets the road in conservation biology. It comes up with possible solutions for ecological problems. Now, short of a time machine, which I'm working on, you can't really get a natural environment exactly the way that it used to be. But you can at least get rid of whatever's causing the problem and help recreate some of the elements that the ecosystem needs to function properly. All of this involves a whole suite of strategies. For instance, what's happening in Milltown is an example of structural restoration. Basically the removal and clean up of whatever human impact was causing the problem, in this case the dam and the toxic sediments behind it. And then the rebuilding of the historical natural structure. Here, the meanders of the river channel and the vegetation. Another strategy is bioremediation, which recruits organisms temporarily to help remove toxins, like bacteria that eat wastes or plants that leech out metals from tainted soils, some kinds of fungi and bacteria are even being explored as ways to bioremediate oil spills. Yet another, somewhat more invasive restoration method is biological augmentation. Rather than removing harmful substances, this involves adding organisms to the ecosystem to restore materials that are gone. Plants that help fix nitrogen like beans, acacia trees and lupine are often used to replenish nitrogen in soils that have been damaged by things like mining or over farming, and ecologists sometimes add mycorrhizal fungi to help new plantings like native grass take hold. But of course we're just humans, and we're not as smart as millions of years of evolution. Sometimes we get things wrong, for example when you bring an invasive species into a place to a place to eradicate another invasive species, sometimes you just end up with two invasive species on your hands, which collapses the ecosystem even more rapidly. The introduction of cane toads to Australia in the 1930s to control beetles is a particularly infamous example. Not only are they everywhere now, but because they're toxic, they're poisoning native species like dingoes that try to eat them. Nice. So you know what? I have an idea. After spending the last couple of weeks talking about ecological problems, I've come to the conclusion that it's just easier to protect ecosystems rather than trying to fix them. Because we know a lot about what makes ecosystems tick, so if we spend more time trying to save them from us, and our stuff, we'll spend less time cleaning up after ourselves and running the risks of getting it wrong. Because as we all know, the sad fact is, uncooking bacon is impossible. But we can eat it. Thank you for joining me on this quick three month jaunt through the natural world. I hope it made you smarter, not just in terms of passing your exams, but also in terms of being a homo sapien that inhabits this planet more wisely.