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Wed, 28 Oct 2009 23:23:20 -0500 |
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Professor Naeem is a scientific illustrator as well as an ecologist,
and we were shown some of his illustrations from The Birders' Handbook
as well as a drawing of a mite for a publication by Hoek.
Professor Naeem is engaged in the study of Biodiversity Ecosystem
Functioning.
This discipline brings together people who study organisms with
physical scientists such as chemists.
He pointed out that the earth is a closed system, and we have reached
the point that we have become aware that ours is a closed system and
we are at it's helm.
He understands our system as being supplied by fossil fuel and fossil
water and consisting of three components:
Natural capital
Climate Regulation
Pollination
Biological Control
Soil Production
Natural Goods and Services
Humanity & Human Capital
Labor
Knowledge
Culture
Government
Man made Capital
Agriculture
Aquaculture
Industrial Goods and Services
Alternative Energy
His graph suggests that these components must function cooperatively
in order to sustain life on our planet.
Simply put, the take-home point of his lecture was that the greater
the diversity of plants, animals, microbes, insects, worms, etc. in
the landscape, the greater the amount of CO2 being processed. Increase
the biodiversity and you will increase the processing of CO2.
Experiments in closed systems have shown that when you increase CO2 or
Nitrogen, you get more biomass, but the largest increase is from the
number of species present in the system. With diversity, invaders do
not do well.
Studies in the rainforest showed that the amount of carbon is
completely tied to the diversity of species present.
Meta analysis of all the biodiversity studies has been done by
Cardinale et al. and was published in Nature in 2006. It concluded
that "a precautionary approach to preserving as much biodiversity as
possible is warranted."
49-60% of the earth is being used for agriculture.
Marine systems are probably worse off than terrestrial systems.
A paper by Boris Worm et al. in Science 2006 projects the global
collapse of all taxa currently fished by the mid 21st century.
Professor Naeem concluded his talk with a photograph of a "keep off
the grass" sign from China. It states:
Civilization is from every tiny thing.
* * * * *
In answer to the question whether promoting biodiversity is better
than leaving things alone, he responded that fertilizer reduces
biodiversity and does not always provide benefits to the targeted
species. Fire should be used in moderation, and managing farms a bit
differently can increase biodiversity.
Natural and social sciences are beginning to be fused, but funding
hasn't caught up yet
* * * * *
A bit about Professor Naeem
http://leopoldleadership.stanford.edu/fellows/naeem
About the work of his team:
http://www.columbia.edu/~sn2121/Shahid_Naeem.html
A classroom lecture
http://vimeo.com/2400272
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