Many scientists consider humans as the most invasive species, as humans can greatly change and environment and impact living things that reside there. Are we being stewards of the world? Take a look at an issue in which human intervention has positively or negatively affected the biodiversity of our ecosystems.
Although we may notice it, human actions are changing the world every single day. little by little, we are affecting biodiversity. changes in biodiversity are 50 times more rapid than they were in any other years in human history.
A key topic that should be considered is invasive species. Humans are not the only invasive species on earth, although we may be trafficking species to places where they don't belong. Let me explain:
When we travel by air, or by car, or even when we send packages by boat, we may be trafficking species into another part of the world without even knowing it. The species will then begin to take over the land and might even adapt to the conditions. They might over-power current species by over-populating, and that is just one way that we have been contributing to the infamous cause that is extinction.
Deforestation. For those of you which have forgotten, (hopefully none), Deforestation is the destruction of forests to make land for agriculture. Cutting down trees, which provide oxygen and absorb carbon dioxide, is seen as a cause of increased greenhouse effect.
The Amazon forest is one of the largest remaining rainforests in the world. It is home to more than half the species on earth, and deforestation is occuring in it to this day. Humans feel the need to cut down trees for paper, furniture, and other material things which can easily be substituted for. Many plants and animals in the Amazon only live in certain areas, near certain types of trees, and different types of plants are reasons for why they live in a certain area. Deforestation can easily wipe out the biodiversity on earth just by cutting down trees which may be the habitat of many types of species.
This illustration describes human economic activities and how they affect biodiversity
It's a never ending cycle, economic growth leads to overconsumption, which requires development... and as we progress as humans, even though we may be inventing new things, or building larger sky scrapers, we need to remember that even though we are accomplishing something as humans, we are affecting the biodiversity of animals on earth. We are basically endangering ourselves.
It's up to you. Start getting involved and try your hardest to make a difference :)
Resources:
http://redpath-museum.mcgill.ca/Qbp/3.Conservation/impacts.htm
http://www.global-greenhouse-warming.com/biodiversity.html
https://www.google.ca/ (for some images)
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1 comment:
I Believe deforestation is a problem too, but i dont believe that its as major a problem as everyone is setting it out to be. When people see a tree beingcut down, they instantly become hippies and start crying. fact is, is that deforestation is'nt a major problem! The U.S agriculture Department says that the U.S has over 735 Million Acres of forest, thats two acres of forestland for every American! There are billions of acres of forest around the world, and we dont just tear them down to make paper or produce awesome sofa's that you can find at a low low price in a Leon's location near you. We tear down sofa's so we can build communities, or create farmland to produce agriculture and meat that we consume. And those companies that tear down forests to build products? they have begun planting trees to replace the ones they have torn down because they have come to the realization that trees are a re-newable resource because the wood can be regrown in a considerable amount of time! unlike the millions of years it takes to produce oil. In conclusion, if you see a tree in a forest chuck away.
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