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Human activities that threaten biodiversity

Biodiversity is threatened by human population growth and resource utilization, leading to decreased species richness. Local factors contributing to biodiversity loss include land-use changes, pollution, resource exploitation, and introduction of exotic species. Balancing human needs with ecosystem health requires doing more with less and preserving  species richness for a sustainable future. Created by California Academy of Sciences.

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  • starky sapling style avatar for user Sakar
    At he says that birds crash into buildings at night when the lights are left on. Shouldn't it be the opposite since they will be able to see things more clearly if the lights are left on?
    (17 votes)
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    • leafers ultimate style avatar for user Evan
      It is not entirely sure, but it is said that birds uses the stars to help navigate through its flight pattern. The lights will seem like a star and it will divert their flight pattern and make them crash into buildings.
      (25 votes)
  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Joel Morales
    If Bacteria use up oxygen, then wouldn't THEY die as a result of having no air? Do they not use oxygen? Does their population go up and down like so: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~>? Do they distribute through the water? I MUST KNOW!
    (9 votes)
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    • winston baby style avatar for user Ivana - Science trainee
      It depends on which Bacteria we are talking about. If you eliminate Aerobic bacteria than you are left off with Anaerobic and Facultative aerobic (both adapted to the anaerobic environment).

      It is super hard to put Bacteria into the context of the ecosystem and 'population'. Bacteria operate on a much smaller scale and are single-celled. they produce colonies. Almost impossible to follow their population since the growth rate is super fast.

      Even if PLanet Earth becomes a completely anaerobic place, Bacteria will thrive.
      (6 votes)
  • starky tree style avatar for user MichelleBelle
    Can we somehow free up space in our own contents and countries for growing Bio diversities, so then we could help balance the population of other wildlife organisms with the human population?
    (5 votes)
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    • mr pink red style avatar for user sanjaroy1999
      We are already doing that. The national parks and nature reserves exist to protect the remaining species and biodiversity. But mostly these areas are pretty small and the animals and plants are restricted to a very limited area for growth. Even if they were larger, it would still take a long time to achieve a balance in population considering how rapid the human population growth is.
      (9 votes)
  • primosaur ultimate style avatar for user eioppelt
    Are we supposed to just stop every thing that might harm the "biodiversity"?
    (5 votes)
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  • starky seed style avatar for user rasmeniandile1218
    explain how edges and corridors can strongly influence landscape biodiversity
    (4 votes)
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    • winston baby style avatar for user Ivana - Science trainee
      Well, edges and corridors are not a natural part of the habitat.

      Probably corridors can act upa s tunnels but not sure for edges. They impose hard surfaces for organisms which could grow on hard surfaces.

      But it negatively affects landscape diversity in aesthetic terms since it is not natural. Mixing cities and nature (parks) is highly artificial. Again, it is good thing to 'introduce' some nature to the cities.
      (3 votes)
  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Animalia
    "the earth was put here for humans to use and upon which we should go forth and multiply."

    Was Thomas Malthus a Christian? "Be fruitful and multiply" and "take dominion over the land" were God's commands to Adam and Eve, the first two humans.
    The wording cannot be coincidental.
    (3 votes)
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    • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user FrozenPhoenix45
      Thomas Malthus was indeed a Christian, probably of the Anglican Church. Although Malthus thought famine and poverty natural outcomes, the ultimate reason for those outcomes was divine institution. He believed that such natural outcomes were God's way of preventing man from being lazy.
      (2 votes)
  • winston baby style avatar for user Wright, Gavin
    are nuclear reactors a big roll in polluting our planet if so why don't we make a different source of energy
    (2 votes)
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    • winston baby style avatar for user Ivana - Science trainee
      It's a complicated issue. Nuclear energy gives more benefits to our Society than in harms us (according to Politicians and authorities).

      The least respected aspect of any idea in Capitalistic Society is - human health and long term negative effects on the Earth. Least paid attention to pollution.


      However, the problem can not be solved easily. Just 'inventing' an alternative form of energy is not enough. How to make people change their practices, premises? people are so rigid and watch everything through narrow holes. While there are many fantastic ideas, money dictates every decision. Lots of great ideas will be let in vain as long as money dictates.
      (3 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user Ordonez Natalie
    habitats through local activities, for example, the habitat is forest so I would name thing in the forest now you try.
    (3 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Praajita Ranade
    What are the global human mediated causes of biodiversity loss?
    (3 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user ANAYAI283
    how can human growth impact on biodiversity?
    (2 votes)
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    • hopper cool style avatar for user Hihi
      As the human population grows, more resources have to be farmed to support the growing population. As a result, many ecosystems are stripped away of their resources,leaving nothing for other species. The species die out. Also, many of the byproducts that humans create harm certain species too
      (2 votes)

Video transcript

(gentle music) - [Narrator] Why is biodiversity threatened? We're gonna talk about something that we'll call local factors, as opposed to more global human effects, but before we go into some of those, we really need to talk about the fact that the human population is growing fast. In 2014, the estimate was just over seven billion people on earth. Human population growth is exponential. The more people you have, the more reproduction you have going on. If you have more reproduction happening, then the curve on a graph of population versus time is gonna get steeper and steeper and steeper to the point where we're looking at about nine billion people by the year 2050. It was Thomas Malthus in 1798 who came up with the concept of carrying capacity. Basically, he said that the earth can't indefinitely support an ever-increasing human population. That's a concept that, to us I think, seems quite clear, but Malthus was a member of a social force at that time, basically, the clergy that felt the earth was put here for humans to use and upon which we should go forth and multiply. But Malthus was among the first in recognizing that there was no way that human population could increase indefinitely without having some sort of an effect on the environment and the environment's ability to support us. The logic he used led him to the fact that based on the kind of farming he saw around him at the time, there would soon be so many people, there wouldn't be enough to eat. Basically, the planet was gonna check population growth through famine. He had seen famine. He knew what it was like, so the planet was gonna take care of it if we didn't. In other words, we would exceed the planet's carrying capacity for human beings. The question arose, what actually is the carrying capacity of planet earth for humans? The answers, like most scientific replies, it depends. We haven't hit the Malthusian limit yet because of a very important thing, and that's human technology, the ability to come up with answers to problems that are facing us at almost every turn. In this case, the answers came through science and technology that increased food production. This made it possible for us to get back on the exponential population growth curve and escape Malthus' view of what the upper limits were. In fact, there are some estimates that suggest if we all did with less and lived at the lowest possible level for existence, earth could support an estimated 40 billion people. But even if we were able to reach a carrying capacity of 40 billion, it would require sacrifices for all humans on earth, some more than others. It raises a huge question about the quality of life, which points out what's increasingly becoming the single most important fact about human population growth on earth today, that the world's wealthiest 16% of the people on earth use 80% of the available resources. The bottom line here, as I say, is that it's complicated. We recognize that the human population is growing. We recognize that resource utilization is much higher in some countries than in others. But what I really want to do is circle back to our primary objective and examine what this really means for biodiversity. If you asked anyone, they'd say it's pretty clear that human population growth and resource utilization have huge effects not just on our social and economic well being, but, of course, on biodiversity. But how, exactly? It translates into decreases in species richness. It's primarily through the loss of species richness that our greatest population growth effects are gonna show up. If we simplify it, it's as fundamental as no two things can occupy the same place at the same time. That's what we're talkin' about. If a human is living in a given place, fewer native plants and animals can live there. The details of how human population growth actually affect species richness are only now starting to be worked out. We don't have a lotta data yet. It's a huge, complex problem. One of the pioneering papers on this was published in 2003 by McKee and colleagues. They measured a number of factors in 114 different countries, and what they discovered was that, out of all the factors that they looked at, human population growth and species richness were tightly linked. In other words, if you were to slow population growth, that might be sufficient to stop drops in species richness. They suggested that all you need to know is population size. Plug this into the equation, and you can figure out in a given place what effect it's going to have on biodiversity. Calculations show that the number of threatened species in an average nation is going to increase 7% by 2020 and 14% by 2050 just based on population growth alone. That's a very simple relationship, but if you open up that box represented by the idea of population growth and unpack what it means, you're talking about lots of human-induced drops in biodiversity. And, as usual, things get complicated. I'd say that there are seven major human mediated causes of biodiversity loss. They can be grouped into two main categories, localized ones and global ones. The global causes we'll look at in separate videos, but for the localized ones, we're gonna list four: land-use change, pollution, resource exploitation and introduction of exotic species. Of course, they overlap a little, but I think, for the most part, these are good ways of unpacking our box of problems. Let's start with land-use changes. These include things like habitat destruction and conversion of natural habitat to human use that isn't necessarily compatible with the organisms that are native there. This includes crop monoculture that results in a very dramatic drop in species richness in a given habitat. When people think about habitat destruction and conversion, they think of slash-and-burn agriculture, destroying rainforests, plowing over stuff or removing the tops of mountains to get at resources like coal. But there are ocean-use changes too that I think we should not ignore. Think of coastal wetland loss and mangrove destruction. Urbanization is an enormous change in land use. More people need more homes and more places to work. That, in turn, requires an expansion of agricultural resources and the spread of those into environments that were previously untouched. It's a very complex problem, as I say, but, simply put, the more people you have, the less natural undeveloped habitat there's going to be. And it's very easy to see how that's linked to a drop in biodiversity. The second local factor is pollution. A lot had been done to bring the subject to people's attention to the point where we think about it as enormous disasters attached to superfund cleanup sites and such, but there are other, more subtle ways of polluting the environment that I think are worth thinking about when we talk about drops in biodiversity. For example, the degradation of local habitats through human activities that cause downstream effects, things like the leaching of harmful chemicals from mines into the water table. Waterborne pollutants can pop out in very unusual places and have really big downstream effects, if you'll excuse the pun, on the reproductive viability of organisms that happen to be in those places. There are also dead zones in the ocean caused by nitrogen fertilizers that wash into rivers. Where the rivers flow into the sea, the nitrogen causes blooms of bacteria, which in turn, use up the oxygen. Anything that tries to be active in an area where the oxygen is being used up by the bacteria, any oxygen-requiring organism, that is pretty much any animal, for example, is going to have a really hard time of it. These dead zones are now starting to be a little bit better understood, and it's pretty clear that they're growing in size and in number in relation to population growth. Then there's the overall problem of waste disposal. Untreated sewage is a classic problem for biodiversity. It's not just, of course, human waste. It has to do with sometimes bizarre chemistry involved in the high-tech stuff that we're making now. We're talking about chemical compounds, including drugs and PCBs. There are lots of strange molecules that humans are producing and dumping. In some cases, you get these hormone mimics, simple compounds derived from prescription drugs and other man-made chemicals that get flushed into waterways. Hormone mimics act like naturally occurring hormones that control normal development of wild organisms, particularly water-living ones. Hormone mimics can also adversely affect their reproductive organs, and there are many, many, many examples of this kind of pollution, one that people wouldn't necessarily think of. Another one that doesn't immediately occur to people is noise pollution. Birds in cities are reacting to noise levels, so even the organisms that are not being wiped out because of our expanding cities are starting to adapt to an urban environment by changing their behavior and reproductive patterns. And some of them just can't do it. Noise can also be a major factor in marine mammal survival. Evidence suggests that sonor pollution interferes with the health of marine mammals. Patterns of reproduction can also be upset by our introduction of light pollution to places where there wasn't light before. Sea turtle hatchlings can be impacted by artificial light heading toward it instead of the ocean when they hatch out of their nests on the beach. And bird strikes on buildings are greatly increased at night when the lights are left on. Let's look at the third local factor, resource exploitation. This gets to the simple idea that humans are always using things from their environment. We are inextricably linked to that environment, and we use up stuff, we always have. We have to do that in order to stay alive. Their are classic ways we use resources like hunting, cutting down forests for firewood and lumber, where does the biodiversity go then? A big one for me as a marine scientist, of course, is fishing. We talk about the harvest of fish, but it's not really a gathering of what one sows, it's really a straight-up removal of a resource, as much as mining is. There are attempts to control overfishing, but to a large extent, we often don't have enough data to know just what a sustainable amount of extraction is until it's too late. Before we were moved to action, for example, the cod fishery had collapsed on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. Today, we have no idea what the long-term effect of huge trawls scraping over the sea bottom will be. Now countries are pushing to fish more on the Antarctic, which is a problem, because fish, like most things there, grow slowly in the cold Antarctic depths. The last local cause of reduction in species richness I wanna mention is the introduction of exotic species, and we'll talk about those in the next video. So just to bring it all back to this concept of carrying capacity, the emerging message is that if everyone on earth can manage to do more with less, especially in places where we presently use up relatively so much more, we might be on track towards a more manageable carrying capacity for humans on earth with a decent quality of life. In our world of finite resources, it's a balancing act between humans and every other species on earth. We have to learn to do more with less to keep that natural balance, the natural species richness. The biodiversity that keeps ecosystems, and therefore all of nature, including ourselves, healthy. (gentle music)