Why is biodiversity so important? - Kim Preshoff

4,075,081 views ・ 2015-04-20

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Our planet's diverse thriving ecosystems may seem like permanent fixtures,
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but they're actually vulnerable to collapse.
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Jungles can become deserts,
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and reefs can become lifeless rocks,
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even without cataclysmic events, like volcanoes and asteroids.
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What makes one ecosystem strong and another weak in the face of change?
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The answer, to a large extent, is biodiversity.
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Biodiversity is built out of three intertwined features:
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ecosystem diversity,
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species diversity,
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and genetic diversity.
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The more intertwining there is between these features,
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the denser and more resilient the weave becomes.
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Take the Amazon rainforest,
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one of the most biodiverse regions on Earth
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due to its complex ecosystems,
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huge mix of species,
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and the genetic variety within those species.
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Here are tangled liana vines,
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which crawl up from the forest floor to the canopy,
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intertwining with treetops
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and growing thick wooden stems that support these towering trees.
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Helped along by the vines,
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trees provide the seeds, fruits and leaves to herbivores,
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such as the tapir and the agouti,
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which disperse their seeds throughout the forest so they can grow.
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Leftovers are consumed by the millions of insects
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that decompose and recycle nutrients to create rich soil.
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The rainforest is a huge system filled with many smaller systems, like this,
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each packed with interconnected species.
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Every link provides stability to the next,
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strengthening biodiversity's weave.
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That weave is further reinforced
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by the genetic diversity within individual species,
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which allows them to cope with changes.
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Species that lack genetic diversity due to isolation
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or low population numbers,
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are much more vulnerable to fluctuations
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caused by climate change, disease or habitat fragmentation.
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Whenever a species disappears because of its weakened gene pool,
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a knot is untied and parts of the net disintegrate.
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So, what if we were to remove one species from the rainforest?
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Would the system fall apart?
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Probably not.
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The volume of species,
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their genetic diversity,
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and the complexity of the ecosystems
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form such rich biodiversity in this forest
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that one species gap in the weave won't cause it to unravel.
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The forest can stay resilient and recover from change.
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But that's not true in every case.
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In some environments, taking away just one important component
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can undermine the entire system.
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Take coral reefs, for instance.
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Many organisms in a reef are dependent on the coral.
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It provides key microhabitats, shelter and breeding grounds
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for thousand of species of fish, crustaceans and mollusks.
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Corals also form interdependent relationships with fungi and bacteria.
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The coral itself is a loom
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that allows the tangled net of biodiversity to be woven.
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That makes coral a keystone organism,
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one that many others depend on for their suvival.
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So what happens when destructive fishing practices,
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pollution and ocean acidification
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weaken coral or even kill it altogether?
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Exactly what you might think.
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The loss of this keystone species leaves its dependents at a loss, too,
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threatening the entire fabric of the reef.
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Ecosystem, species and genetic diversity
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together form the complex tangled weave of biodiversity
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that is vital for the survival of organisms on Earth.
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We humans are woven into this biodiversity, too.
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When just a few strands are lost,
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our own well-being is threatened.
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Cut too many links, and we risk unraveling it all.
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What the future brings is unpredictable,
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but biodiversity can give us an insurance policy,
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Earth's own safety net to safeguard our survival.
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