cultural dimensions of wildlife

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Cultural dimensions of wildlife in the Anthropocene Anthropoce ne defaunatio n

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Cultural dimensions of wildlife. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gCov0PXkVo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwmhmAfcRt8. Name some extinct organisms. _________________ _________________ _________________ _________________. Declared extinct:. Dusky Seaside Sparrow (1987) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Cultural dimensions of wildlife in the Anthropocene

Anthropocene defaunation

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Page 4: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Quiz 7, Online until Oct 2

Page 5: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Quiz 8, Thursday, Sept 28

Page 6: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

How many species?• 5 - 9 million non-

bacterial species estimated

• Some estimates range up to 100 million because of potential insect diversity

• 1.5 million cataloged, but many are only descriptions or a single museum specimen

• New species are described every year

Page 7: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Extinction• Calculations suggest that

the current rates of extinction are 100 to 1,000 times natural background levels

• Lose between 1-5% of species per year

• Sixth Extinction – the only one driven by humans

Page 8: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Extinction• Not just megafaunal

extinctions associated with early humans, but ongoing into the present

• The modern record of extinctions caused by humans is extensive

Page 9: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Extinction

• There is evidence that contemporary extinctions, while very high, have not been as high as some had predicted, for several reasons:– Some species thought to be extinct are found again

(soledon)– Species surviving on their own in secondary habitats

and anthropogenic land covers (fisher)– Effective conservation efforts (black-footed ferret)

Page 10: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Rediscovery of soledons in Cuba and Hispaniola (Haiti and Dominican Republic)

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Expansion of fishers into suburban and urban areas

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Black footed ferret recovery in North America

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Signatures of human-associated declines in biodiversity

• Faunal size bias• Faunal homogenization• Extinction debt• Trophic cascades

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Faunal size bias• Defaunation in the

Anthropocene is size-specific

• Large-bodied mammals and birds are more susceptible to extinction

• Progressively smaller animals threatened

• Today’s mammals on Earth are very small compared to past

Page 15: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Faunal homogenization

Page 16: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Extinction debt• Lock in of

future extinction of species due to human impacts that occurred in the past or present.

• Time delay between human impact and extinction

Spatial patterns in bird species and extinction debt in the Brazilian Amazon

Page 17: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Trophic cascades

Page 18: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Trophic cascades

Extinction of these large predator species can have disproportionately large effects on the abundances of other organisms and on the structure and function of ecosystems.

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Page 20: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

What are the top two leading causes?

Human-related causes of biodiversity decline and extinction

Pollution?

Climate change?

Habitat fragmentation?

Invasive species?

Overexploitation from hunting and trade?

Page 21: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Habitat fragmentation• Fragmentation is a

pervasive effect of human presence and the leading cause of extinction

• Direct and immediate effects on organisms

• Results in island systems

Page 22: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

• In fragmented islands• Isolated populations• Restricted access to

resources• Inbreeding• Harder to evade predators• Stochastic (random) events

can wipe out small isolated populations

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Overexploitation by humans

• Humans exploit prey far more than any other predator

• More than 90% of the mammals and birds that have gone extinct recently (within 500 years) were hunted by humans

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Democratic Republic of CongoVirunga National Park, 2008

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Quiz 9, Friday, Sept 29th

Page 32: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Types of overexploitation• Hunting for bushmeat• Wildlife trade for

– Pets– Traditional medicines,

art

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• Bushmeat – illegal, unsustainable trade in wildlife for income or meat.

Bushmeat

Page 34: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

• Bushmeat is illegal as defined by:– Where hunting took

place– Method of hunting – Status of the species

taken • Not the same as

game meat legally hunted, farmed, and sold in a market

Page 35: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

• Bushmeat trade endemic in many parts of Africa and Asia

Page 36: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Implications• Biodiversity decline• Trophic cascades• Zoonoses –diseases

caused by pathogens that jump from animals to human– HIV (virus)– Ebola (virus)

Page 37: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

What drives the bushmeat trade• Poverty and the

need for an income

• Provides protein where other sources lacking

• Instability in food supply

• Cultural, ceremonial uses of animals

Page 38: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Critiquing the bushmeat poverty hypothesis

• Poverty as a cause of bushmeat is often defined an material deprivation, an economic definition that invokes economic responses

• However, poverty also encompasses– Lack of power, prestige, and voice– Inability to define one’s future and day-to-day

activities• Addressing bushmeat requires more than

economic responses

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Bushmeat in context: Cameroon and Liberia

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Bushmeat in context• Rather than simply legal vs illegal,

bushmeat needs to be understood in its historical, social, political context

• Range of responses to it, no one best overall solution – Tougher rules about possession of

equipment or animals? – Provisioning of alternative livelihoods,

i.e., market incentives to conserve wildlife or to farm wildlife?

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Page 42: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Critiquing the bushmeat concept

• Bushmeat unfairly targets one type of overexploitation specific to a group of people (rural) and a location (the developing world)

Page 43: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Critiquing the bushmeat concept• Bushmeat, as a larger

practice of unregulated or illegal consumption of wildlife, is common across economic circumstances

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The passenger pigeon: North American bushmeat

Commercial hunting lead to their extinction in 1914. There were no existing rules and to protect them. If this hunting were to go on today, it would likely be similarly labeled as bushmeat by outsiders that prioritize conservation of biodiversity.

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Page 47: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Consumption of turtle in Asia

Page 48: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

• Rise of affluence in China due to their rise in economic power led to increased domestic demand for turtle meat

• Turtles collected in poorer countries like Laos, Malaysia, Cambodia, Vietnam

• High prices for live turtles in China drive collection

Page 49: Cultural dimensions of wildlife

Demand for turtle meat in Asia has increased illegal and legal hunting pressure on turtles in the US. Turtles are caught here but sold and exported to China and other Asian countries where economic growth has increased household incomes. Many states are now considering legislation to more tightly control turtle hunting. Turtle hunting has been legal in many states, but the hunting regulations (length of season, number of turtles taken) need to be reassessed in light of increasing pressure