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  • Hi. It's Mr. Andersen and welcome to biology essentials video 55. This is on

  • biodiversity. This is video 55 of 55 videos. So this is the last one. You made it to the

  • end. And so if you made it the whole way from the first video on natural selection to this

  • last video, congratulations. If not, I better get started because you want to know about

  • biodiversity. I started with Darwin and I end with EO Wilson. EO Wilson is kind of a

  • modern day Darwin. He's famous. And some people would call him the father of biodiversity.

  • I got a chance to meet him last year and talk to him for just briefly. But what he was excited

  • about was the encyclopedia of life. It was his TED wish. This idea that we could have

  • a website where we organize all life on our planet. Each organism or each species gets

  • its own page. And it can infinitely grow from there. And so it was fun to talk to him. He

  • actually injured his eye when he was a child fishing. Set the hook and the fish got caught

  • in his eye. And so he ended up having poor vision. And so instead of concentrating on

  • the big of ecology he concentrated on the small. And he's famous for his work with ants.

  • Understanding how they communicate using chemicals. And so we owe a lot to him. But he also studied

  • the importance of biodiversity. The importance of life on our planet and the amount of life

  • that we have. And so I'll leave you with a quote at the end from EO Wilson. But I better

  • get started on biodiversity. Remember, ecosystems are large areas where the climate is the same,

  • but they are constantly in flux with the changing environment. And as that environment changes,

  • and environments are changing especially fast now due to human impact, it's important that

  • you have biodiversity or variation in ecosystems. And so biodiversity is a pretty big term.

  • We could define it in a couple of different ways. But I'm mostly going to kind of talk

  • about ecosystem biodiversity. And then concentrate on keystone species. And so a keystone species

  • is essentially one species in an ecosystem that is disproportionally move important than

  • other species. In other words when you remove it the ecosystem has a tendency to fall apart.

  • I'll talk about sea otters and jaguars as examples of keystone species. But first of

  • all what is biodiversity? Biodiversity is essentially variation in life. And when we

  • talk about biodiversity we could be talking about the actual species that we have. We

  • could be talking about the genes that we have. Or we could be talking about the ecosystems

  • that we have on our planet. But essentially it's how much variation we have in life. And

  • so this rainforest in Australia must be balanced between all of the species that live there.

  • And then increasingly impacts that humans are going to have as we start to change the

  • climate and as we start to effect ecosystems. And so this is a picture of some fruit found

  • in a forest in Panama. And so as we look in rain forests we surely have an increase in

  • biodiversity. But humans are starting to do things that will actually decrease biodiversity.

  • So farming is great. We need food obviously. But what we're doing with a lot of our farming

  • is we're farming using what's called a monoculture. So we're just planting one thing. So this

  • used to be a forest. We cut it down. We're just planting potatoes. And when we do that,

  • we're decreasing the amount of the area of life where we can have a diversity of life.

  • And we're replacing it with just one species of potato. So we're decreasing the species.

  • And we're decreasing that genetic variability. And I love this graph over here. What it shows

  • you essentially is how many species we have on our planet. And how many of those we've

  • actually discovered. And how many scientists think we have yet to discover. So insects

  • when they publish this table, they thought there were around maybe 9 million species

  • of insects on our planet. But we've only identified a small portion of that. Same with plants.

  • Arachnids. Mushrooms. We've always discovered much less than half of the species that are

  • still found on our planet. And some scientists would push this number way out here. Maybe

  • close to like 30 million types of insects. And we've only identified a small percentage

  • of those. And so we're at a weird time where the amount of genetic diversity that we have

  • on our planet is decreasing at a rate much faster than we can actually identify it. And

  • that's why biodiversity is important. Now one thing I want to talk about in this podcast

  • is the idea of a keystone species. A keystone is a great analogy. So if you're building

  • an arch, an arch essentially has pedestals on either side. You're going to have series

  • of stones that go across the top. But this one block, this one block right up here is

  • called the keystone. In other words this whole thing you could imagine, if I were to remove

  • this keystone, all of the weight of this side and all of the weight on this side are all

  • placed against that keystone. So if I remove that, the whole arch falls in on itself. Now

  • ecosystems are not built like arches but they are to a degree. And so a jaguar is an important

  • predator in South America. And the reason why is that it feeds on cayman. It can even

  • kill adult cayman. It feeds on turtles. It feeds on deer. It feeds on capybara and tapirs

  • and peccaries and anacondas and sloths and armadillos and frogs. In other words it feeds

  • on up to 87 different species. And so if the population of deer gets higher, than the jaguars

  • that mostly feed at night are going to start to prey on that deer. Or as the whatever,

  • capybara population goes up. And so this one jaguar is going to serve as a control on a

  • number of different species in that area. If we remove the jaguar, we move that selective

  • pressure. We remove that one keystone species. And so it's weird to say it's more important,

  • but it is more important than removing just the capybara in an area. Because it's going

  • to have a greater impact on the entire ecosystem. Sea otters also have been mentioned as a keystone

  • species. And why is that? Well, they love to feed on sea urchins. And sea urchins themselves

  • feed on kelp. And so we have these kelp forests in the Pacific Ocean. Sea urchins would decimate

  • kelp forests if they weren't kept in check by the sea otters. So if we remove that sea

  • otter, now the sea urchins are gong to go crazy and deplete the kelp. And all of these

  • fish depend on the kelp forest. And so it can have a greater, even though if we were

  • to measure like the weight of the sea otters in that area of the ocean. It's very small.

  • But they actually feed on quite a bit. There were some studies that showed that orcas were

  • preying on sea otters as they saw a decrease in the seal population. And a lot of that

  • maybe had an impact, it was a human impact, that way actually causing that diet shift.

  • Orcas, you know, a sea otter's not much food for an orca. But it can have huge impacts

  • on the whole ecosystem. And so that's what a keystone species is. But I want to leave

  • you with this one quote of EO Wilson. He was talked to in the 1980s, they were talking

  • to him about the cold war and nuclear build up and all of these things seemed to be putting

  • us at risk. And he said, "The one process ongoing that will take millions of years to

  • correct is the loss of genetic and species diversity by destruction of natural habitats.

  • This is the folley our that our descendants are least likely to forgive us." It's important

  • that you understand that you're part of an ecosystem and you clearly are a keystone species

  • and you can make big changes. And so without further ado, that's the end!

Hi. It's Mr. Andersen and welcome to biology essentials video 55. This is on

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生物多様性 (Biodiversity)

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    阿多賓 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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