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Announcements
Objectives
Why Preserve Biodiversity?
Pharmaceuticals
Foods
Biological Products
Ecosystem Benefits
Keystone Species
Studies of Biodiversity
Lecture
Syllabus
IB
100/101 Home
Page
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Announcements
Text Readings in
Lewis et al. |
Testing Your Knowledge |
Thinking Scientifically |
| Chapter 45, Environmental
Challenges |
No questions today |
No questions today |
Information on the topic of biodiversity is presented in
several
different sections of your text, from chapter opening vignettes to
boxed
readings. Explore your text to discover these readings!
You may also ask questions and see answers to your
classmates'
questions in Web Crossing in the "Talk to Ross and Ed" discussion.
Objectives:
After studying this material you should be able to:
- Define the term biodiversity and explain how the
three levels of
biodiversity (genetic diversity, species diversity, and ecosystem
diversity) are related and dependent on one another.
- Explain what is meant by "The Sixth Extinction" and
why this should
concern us.
- Explain how biodiversity is lost, how rapidly it is
currently being
lost, and some of the reasons why we might be concerned about this
loss.
- Explain the potential value of biodiversity in terms
of both direct
human uses and ecosystem level processes.
- Describe the relationship between biodiversity and
keystone
species.
- Explain some of the ways in which biodiversity is
being
studied.
- Understand these terms and the relationships among
them:
| biodiversity |
genetic variability |
species variability |
| ecosystem variability |
keystone species |
population |
| mass extinctions |
alleles |
mutations |
| bioprospecting |
gene banks |
systematic biology |
| taxonomy |
conservation biology |
hot spots
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What are the material benefits of preserving
biodiversity?
- Pharmaceuticals
- Food
- Wood and other biological products
- Genetic resources
- Ecosystem level benefits
- Other benefits
Pharmaceuticals - bioprospecting: the new gold rush
- Will technological advances in the pharmaceutical
industry preclude
further natural-products research?
- 80% of the people in less-developed countries rely
heavily or
entirely on drugs derived from natural sources (World Health
Organization estimate). More than 20,000 species have been used for
medicinal purposes.
- Of the drugs used in the U.S., 25% are derived from
plants, 13% from
microorganisms (including many antibiotics), and 3% from animals.
Overall, 41% of our prescription drugs have their active
ingredients
derived from living organisms.
- Will technological advances in the pharmaceutical
industry preclude
further natural-products research?
- According to the National Cancer Institute, over
70% of the
promising anti-cancer drugs come from plants in the rain forest.
See bioprospecting for new
pharmaceuticals.
- Who really benefits from the commercialization of
biodiversity? In
the early 1990's, germplasm from developing countries was worth $32
billion per year to the pharmaceutical industry. Now, many tropical
countries are taking real steps to protect their interests. See Shaman
Pharmaceuticals.
- An experimental but promising anti-HIV compound
called Prostratin
has been isolated from Homalanthus nutans
(Euphorbiaceae). This
plant is only found in the tropical Pacific island of Samoa, where it
has been long used in native herbal medicine. A recent agreement will
return 20% of all commercial revenues from drugs developed from this
plant to the native peoples of Samoa. See this article from
Time magazine.
- Relatively few flowering plants (that is, of the ones
we know) have
been examined for their medicinal properties. Up to 1992, only 2% (or
5,000 species) had been examined. A number of these have become
multi-billion dollar commodities:
- Digitalis (foxglove), for the
cardiac stimulant
digitoxin.
- Catharanthus roseus (rosy
periwinkle), for vincristine & vinblastine (two of
the most
effective anticancer agents ever discovered). These drugs are used for
the treatment of childhood leukemia and Hodgkin's disease.
Who benefitted from this discovery?
- Taxus brevifolia (Pacific yew)
for taxol, used to treat ovarian
and breast cancer.
- Cyclosporin, a powerful immunosuppression agent
used in organ
transplants, was discovered in a Norwegian fungus.
- The Calophyllum story
- For more information:
Foods
- 30,000 or more plant species have edible parts; 7,000
species are
grown and used as food by humans; 20 species feed the majority (90%) of
the world's population; just 3 species are the major
world-wide
staples (rice, wheat, and corn).
- Modern cultivated races vs. "land races." The latter
are grown by
indigenous peoples and are diverse genetically. Only very few varieties
of corn and rice are cultivated widely. The genetic diversity
represented by these cultivated varieties is quite small (yet our
existence is dependent upon them!)
- Wild plant gene pools are important to augment the
narrow genetic
base of established food crops (by providing resistance to disease,
improved agricultural productivity, and different environmental
tolerances). Most improvements in agriculture will depend upon the
survival of these "gene banks."
- In 1970, 15% of the US corn crop was wiped out by
leaf blight.
Mexican wild corn (Zea diploperennis) is a wild
relative of corn.
It was discovered in the 1970's. It has the same chromosome number as Zea
mays and exhibits perennial growth. It
occupies 25 acres of
cold mountain land, and was one week away from extinction! This weedy
plant resistant to a number of serious viral corn diseases that infect Zea
mays. Researchers have transferred
this viral resistance to
corn. It may also be possible to produce perennial corn.
- Many presently underutilized food crops have the
potential to become
important in the future. Remember: the relatively few species
currently cultivated have had lots of research and selective breeding
applied to them!
- For more information:
Wood and other biological products
The potential products
obtained from biological resources are endless. Some examples
include:
- fuel, construction, paper production
- natural rubber has properties unmatched
by any synthetic
material. A fantastic book about
exploring the amazon for
rubber
- new hybrids and varieties of ornamental plants
developed and
marketed
- adhesives from barnacles
- fibers
from spider silk
- antibiotics and pesticides from
microorganisms
- petroleum substitutes
Ecosystem level benefits
- Protection of water resources (vegetation regulates
and stabilizes
water runoff and increases water yield and quality).
- Soil formation and protection (helps in the formation
and
maintenance of soil structure and quality, the retention of moisture
and
nutrient levels, and the prevention of erosion).
- Pollution breakdown and absorption (bacteria and
other organisms
breakdown pollutants; wetlands can act as filters).
- Recovery from unpredictable events (primary and
secondary
succession). Degraded ecosystems are less likely to recover from
natural and man-made disasters (genetic variability is depleted and
extinctions occur). Biodiversity promotes stability.
- The removal or disturbance of one part of an
ecosystem could affect
the functioning of many other parts--recall the intricate web of
life.
- Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
Keystone Species
What are they, and how are they related to biodiversity?
A keystone species is one that
affects the survival and
abundance of many other species in a community. Its removal results in
a significant shift in the composition of a community, and sometimes
even the physical structure of the environment.
If the keystone species is returned, the community can
be
restored.
How do we study biodiversity?
Taxonomy & Systematic Biology--
To understand genetic
diversity and genetic relatedness for the construction of evolutionary
histories and to understand how species arise.
Much of our knowledge of biodiversity comes from the
basic activities
of systematic biologists, namely the discovery,
inventory, and
description of new species, the determination of their characteristics
and evolutionary relationships to other species, and the organization
of
this knowledge into classification systems. These classifications are
powerful predictive tools that help us to understand, maintain, and
effectively utilize this great biological wealth.
- The Tree of
Life Project and its goals.
- The All Species
Foundation, is a non-profit organization dedicated to the
complete
inventory of all species of life on Earth within the next 25 years - a
human generation.
- Integrative
Biology 260 (formerly Plant Biology 260) introduces the
principles
and methods of identifying, naming, and classifying flowering plants.
It
includes a survey of selected flowering plant families and provides
information on their interrelationships. The course meets three times a
week for lecture and once a week for a two-hour lab. 4 credit hours
(counts for Advanced Hours in LAS). Click here
for some comments on why you might want to take this course.
Ecology & Conservation Biology--
The study of the
interrelationships of organisms and their environment. How to protect
and conserve populations, species, and ecosystems under the growing
pressure of human habitation.
- Biodiversity
Hotspots from Conservation International. The 25 richest and
most
threatened reservoirs of plant and animal life on Earth. The 25
biodiversity hotspots contain 44 percent of all plant species and 35
percent of all terrestrial vertebrate species in only 1.4 percent of
the
planet's land area.
- Endangered
Cats (if this link is still down try
HERE)
- Efforts in Illinois
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