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Overexploitation

Overexploitation, also called overharvesting, refers to harvesting a renewable resource to the point of diminishing returns.[2] Continued overexploitation can lead to the destruction of the resource, as it will be unable to replenish. The term applies to natural resources such as water aquifers, grazing pastures and forests, wild medicinal plants, fish stocks and other wildlife.

Atlantic cod stocks were severely overexploited in the 1970s and 1980s, leading to their abrupt collapse in 1992.[1]

In ecology, overexploitation describes one of the five main activities threatening global biodiversity.[3] Ecologists use the term to describe populations that are harvested at an unsustainable rate, given their natural rates of mortality and capacities for reproduction. This can result in extinction at the population level and even extinction of whole species. In conservation biology, the term is usually used in the context of human economic activity that involves the taking of biological resources, or organisms, in larger numbers than their populations can withstand.[4] The term is also used and defined somewhat differently in fisheries, hydrology and natural resource management.

Overexploitation can lead to resource destruction, including extinctions. However, it is also possible for overexploitation to be sustainable, as discussed below in the section on fisheries. In the context of fishing, the term overfishing can be used instead of overexploitation, as can overgrazing in stock management, overlogging in forest management, overdrafting in aquifer management, and endangered species in species monitoring. Overexploitation is not an activity limited to humans. Introduced predators and herbivores, for example, can overexploit native flora and fauna.

History

 
When the giant flightless birds called moa were overexploited to the point of extinction,[5] the giant Haast's eagle that preyed on them also became extinct.[6]

Concern about overexploitation is relatively recent, though overexploitation itself is not a new phenomenon. It has been observed for millennia. For example, ceremonial cloaks worn by the Hawaiian kings were made from the mamo bird; a single cloak used the feathers of 70,000 birds of this now-extinct species. The dodo, a flightless bird from Mauritius, is another well-known example of overexploitation. As with many island species, it was naive about certain predators, allowing humans to approach and kill it with ease.[7]

From the earliest of times, hunting has been an important human activity as a means of survival. There is a whole history of overexploitation in the form of overhunting. The overkill hypothesis (Quaternary extinction events) explains why the megafaunal extinctions occurred within a relatively short period. This can be traced to human migration. The most convincing evidence of this theory is that 80% of the North American large mammal species disappeared within 1000 years of the arrival of humans on the western hemisphere continents.[8] The fastest ever recorded extinction of megafauna occurred in New Zealand, where by 1500 AD, just 200 years after settling the islands, ten species of the giant moa birds were hunted to extinction by the Māori.[5] A second wave of extinctions occurred later with European settlement.

In more recent times, overexploitation has resulted in the gradual emergence of the concepts of sustainability and sustainable development, which has built on other concepts, such as sustainable yield,[9] eco-development,[10][11] and deep ecology.[12][13]

Overview

Overexploitation does not necessarily lead to the destruction of the resource, nor is it necessarily unsustainable. However, depleting the numbers or amount of the resource can change its quality. For example, footstool palm is a wild palm tree found in Southeast Asia. Its leaves are used for thatching and food wrapping, and overharvesting has resulted in its leaf size becoming smaller.

Tragedy of the commons

 
Cows on Selsley Common. The tragedy of the commons is a useful parable for understanding how overexploitation can occur.

In 1968, the journal Science published an article by Garrett Hardin entitled "The Tragedy of the Commons".[14] It was based on a parable that William Forster Lloyd published in 1833 to explain how individuals innocently acting in their own self interest can overexploit, and destroy, a resource that they all share.[15][pages needed] Lloyd described a simplified hypothetical situation based on medieval land tenure in Europe. Herders share common land on which they are each entitled to graze their cows. In Hardin's article, it is in each herder's individual interest to graze each new cow that the herder acquires on the common land, even if the carrying capacity of the common is exceeded, which damages the common for all the herders. The self-interested herder receives all of the benefits of having the additional cow, while all the herders share the damage to the common. However, all herders reach the same rational decision to buy additional cows and graze them on the common, which eventually destroys the common. Hardin concludes:

Therein is the tragedy. Each man is locked into a system that compels him to increase his herd without limit—in a world that is limited. Ruin is the destination toward which all men rush, each pursuing his own interest in a society that believes in the freedom of the commons. Freedom in a commons brings ruin to all.[14]: 1244 

In the course of his essay, Hardin develops the theme, drawing in many examples of latter day commons, such as national parks, the atmosphere, oceans, rivers and fish stocks. The example of fish stocks had led some to call this the "tragedy of the fishers".[16] A major theme running through the essay is the growth of human populations, with the Earth's finite resources being the general common.

The tragedy of the commons has intellectual roots tracing back to Aristotle, who noted that "what is common to the greatest number has the least care bestowed upon it",[17] as well as to Hobbes and his Leviathan.[18] The opposite situation to a tragedy of the commons is sometimes referred to as a tragedy of the anticommons: a situation in which rational individuals, acting separately, collectively waste a given resource by underutilizing it.

The tragedy of the commons can be avoided if it is appropriately regulated. Hardin's use of "commons" has frequently been misunderstood, leading Hardin to later remark that he should have titled his work "The tragedy of the unregulated commons".[19]

Sectors

Fisheries

 
The Atlantic bluefin tuna is currently overexploited. Scientists say 7,500 tons annually is the sustainable limit, yet the fishing industry continue to harvest 60,000 tons.

In wild fisheries, overexploitation or overfishing occurs when a fish stock has been fished down "below the size that, on average, would support the long-term maximum sustainable yield of the fishery".[20] However, overexploitation can be sustainable.[21]

When a fishery starts harvesting fish from a previously unexploited stock, the biomass of the fish stock will decrease, since harvesting means fish are being removed. For sustainability, the rate at which the fish replenish biomass through reproduction must balance the rate at which the fish are being harvested. If the harvest rate is increased, then the stock biomass will further decrease. At a certain point, the maximum harvest yield that can be sustained will be reached, and further attempts to increase the harvest rate will result in the collapse of the fishery. This point is called the maximum sustainable yield, and in practice, usually occurs when the fishery has been fished down to about 30% of the biomass it had before harvesting started.[22]

It is possible to fish the stock down further to, say, 15% of the pre-harvest biomass, and then adjust the harvest rate so the biomass remains at that level. In this case, the fishery is sustainable, but is now overexploited, because the stock has been run down to the point where the sustainable yield is less than it could be.

Fish stocks are said to "collapse" if their biomass declines by more than 95 percent of their maximum historical biomass. Atlantic cod stocks were severely overexploited in the 1970s and 1980s, leading to their abrupt collapse in 1992.[1] Even though fishing has ceased, the cod stocks have failed to recover.[1] The absence of cod as the apex predator in many areas has led to trophic cascades.[1]

About 25% of world fisheries are now overexploited to the point where their current biomass is less than the level that maximizes their sustainable yield.[23] These depleted fisheries can often recover if fishing pressure is reduced until the stock biomass returns to the optimal biomass. At this point, harvesting can be resumed near the maximum sustainable yield.[24]

The tragedy of the commons can be avoided within the context of fisheries if fishing effort and practices are regulated appropriately by fisheries management. One effective approach may be assigning some measure of ownership in the form of individual transferable quotas (ITQs) to fishermen. In 2008, a large scale study of fisheries that used ITQs, and ones that did not, provided strong evidence that ITQs help prevent collapses and restore fisheries that appear to be in decline.[25][26]

Water resources

Water resources, such as lakes and aquifers, are usually renewable resources which naturally recharge (the term fossil water is sometimes used to describe aquifers which do not recharge). Overexploitation occurs if a water resource, such as the Ogallala Aquifer, is mined or extracted at a rate that exceeds the recharge rate, that is, at a rate that exceeds the practical sustained yield. Recharge usually comes from area streams, rivers and lakes. An aquifer which has been overexploited is said to be overdrafted or depleted. Forests enhance the recharge of aquifers in some locales, although generally forests are a major source of aquifer depletion.[27][28] Depleted aquifers can become polluted with contaminants such as nitrates, or permanently damaged through subsidence or through saline intrusion from the ocean.

This turns much of the world's underground water and lakes into finite resources with peak usage debates similar to oil.[29][30] These debates usually centre around agriculture and suburban water usage but generation of electricity from nuclear energy or coal and tar sands mining is also water resource intensive.[31] A modified Hubbert curve applies to any resource that can be harvested faster than it can be replaced.[32] Though Hubbert's original analysis did not apply to renewable resources, their overexploitation can result in a Hubbert-like peak. This has led to the concept of peak water.

Forestry

 
Clear cutting of old growth forests in Canada.

Forests are overexploited when they are logged at a rate faster than reforestation takes place. Reforestation competes with other land uses such as food production, livestock grazing, and living space for further economic growth. Historically utilization of forest products, including timber and fuel wood, have played a key role in human societies, comparable to the roles of water and cultivable land. Today, developed countries continue to utilize timber for building houses, and wood pulp for paper. In developing countries almost three billion people rely on wood for heating and cooking.[33] Short-term economic gains made by conversion of forest to agriculture, or overexploitation of wood products, typically leads to loss of long-term income and long term biological productivity. West Africa, Madagascar, Southeast Asia and many other regions have experienced lower revenue because of overexploitation and the consequent declining timber harvests.[34]

Biodiversity

 
The rich diversity of marine life inhabiting coral reefs attracts bioprospectors. Many coral reefs are overexploited; threats include coral mining, cyanide and blast fishing, and overfishing in general.

Overexploitation is one of the main threats to global biodiversity.[3] Other threats include pollution, introduced and invasive species, habitat fragmentation, habitat destruction,[3] uncontrolled hybridization,[35] climate change,[36] ocean acidification[37] and the driver behind many of these, human overpopulation.[38]

One of the key health issues associated with biodiversity is drug discovery and the availability of medicinal resources.[39] A significant proportion of drugs are natural products derived, directly or indirectly, from biological sources. Marine ecosystems are of particular interest in this regard.[40] However, unregulated and inappropriate bioprospecting could potentially lead to overexploitation, ecosystem degradation and loss of biodiversity.[41][42][43]

Endangered and extinct species

 
It is not just humans that overexploit resources. Overgrazing can be caused by native fauna, as shown in the upper right. However, past human overexploitation (leading to elimination of some predators) may be behind the situation.

Species from all groups of fauna and flora are affected by overexploitation.

All living organisms require resources to survive. Overexploitation of these resources for protracted periods can deplete natural stocks to the point where they are unable to recover within a short time frame. Humans have always harvested food and other resources they have needed to survive. Human populations, historically, were small, and methods of collection limited to small quantities. With an exponential increase in human population, expanding markets and increasing demand, combined with improved access and techniques for capture, are causing the exploitation of many species beyond sustainable levels.[44] In practical terms, if continued, it reduces valuable resources to such low levels that their exploitation is no longer sustainable and can lead to the extinction of a species, in addition to having dramatic, unforeseen effects, on the ecosystem.[45] Overexploitation often occurs rapidly as markets open, utilising previously untapped resources, or locally used species.

 
The Carolina parakeet was hunted to extinction.

Today, overexploitation and misuse of natural resources is an ever-present threat for species richness. This is more prevalent when looking at island ecology and the species that inhabit them, as islands can be viewed as the world in miniature. Island endemic populations are more prone to extinction from overexploitation, as they often exist at low densities with reduced reproductive rates.[46] A good example of this are island snails, such as the Hawaiian Achatinella and the French Polynesian Partula. Achatinelline snails have 15 species listed as extinct and 24 critically endangered[47] while 60 species of partulidae are considered extinct with 14 listed as critically endangered.[48] The WCMC have attributed over-collecting and very low lifetime fecundity for the extreme vulnerability exhibited among these species.[49]

As another example, when the humble hedgehog was introduced to the Scottish island of Uist, the population greatly expanded and took to consuming and overexploiting shorebird eggs, with drastic consequences for their breeding success. Twelve species of avifauna are affected, with some species numbers being reduced by 39%.[50]

Where there is substantial human migration, civil unrest, or war, controls may no longer exist. With civil unrest, for example in the Congo and Rwanda, firearms have become common and the breakdown of food distribution networks in such countries leaves the resources of the natural environment vulnerable.[51] Animals are even killed as target practice, or simply to spite the government. Populations of large primates, such as gorillas and chimpanzees, ungulates and other mammals, may be reduced by 80% or more by hunting, and certain species may be eliminated altogether.[52] This decline has been called the bushmeat crisis.

Vertebrates

Overexploitation threatens one-third of endangered vertebrates, as well as other groups. Excluding edible fish, the illegal trade in wildlife is valued at $10 billion per year. Industries responsible for this include the trade in bushmeat, the trade in Chinese medicine, and the fur trade.[53] The Convention for International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, or CITES was set up in order to control and regulate the trade in endangered animals. It currently protects, to a varying degree, some 33,000 species of animals and plants. It is estimated that a quarter of the endangered vertebrates in the United States of America and half of the endangered mammals is attributed to overexploitation.[3][54]

Birds

Overall, 50 bird species that have become extinct since 1500 (approximately 40% of the total) have been subject to overexploitation,[55] including:

Mammals

Fish

Various

Invertebrates

Plants

Cascade effects

 
Overexploiting sea otters resulted in cascade effects which destroyed kelp forest ecosystems.

Overexploitation of species can result in knock-on or cascade effects. This can particularly apply if, through overexploitation, a habitat loses its apex predator. Because of the loss of the top predator, a dramatic increase in their prey species can occur. In turn, the unchecked prey can then overexploit their own food resources until population numbers dwindle, possibly to the point of extinction.

A classic example of cascade effects occurred with sea otters. Starting before the 17th century and not phased out until 1911, sea otters were hunted aggressively for their exceptionally warm and valuable pelts, which could fetch up to $2500 US. This caused cascade effects through the kelp forest ecosystems along the Pacific Coast of North America.[58]

One of the sea otters’ primary food sources is the sea urchin. When hunters caused sea otter populations to decline, an ecological release of sea urchin populations occurred. The sea urchins then overexploited their main food source, kelp, creating urchin barrens, areas of seabed denuded of kelp, but carpeted with urchins. No longer having food to eat, the sea urchin became locally extinct as well. Also, since kelp forest ecosystems are homes to many other species, the loss of the kelp caused other cascade effects of secondary extinctions.[59]

In 1911, when only one small group of 32 sea otters survived in a remote cove, an international treaty was signed to prevent further exploitation of the sea otters. Under heavy protection, the otters multiplied and repopulated the depleted areas, which slowly recovered. More recently, with declining numbers of fish stocks, again due to overexploitation, killer whales have experienced a food shortage and have been observed feeding on sea otters, again reducing their numbers.[60]

See also

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Further reading

  • FAO (2005) Overcoming factors of unsustainability and overexploitation in fisheries Fisheries report 782, Rome. ISBN 978-92-5-105449-9
  • We’ve overexploited the planet, now we need to change if we’re to survive. Patrick Vallance for The Guardian. July 8, 2022.

overexploitation, also, called, overharvesting, refers, harvesting, renewable, resource, point, diminishing, returns, continued, overexploitation, lead, destruction, resource, will, unable, replenish, term, applies, natural, resources, such, water, aquifers, g. Overexploitation also called overharvesting refers to harvesting a renewable resource to the point of diminishing returns 2 Continued overexploitation can lead to the destruction of the resource as it will be unable to replenish The term applies to natural resources such as water aquifers grazing pastures and forests wild medicinal plants fish stocks and other wildlife Atlantic cod stocks were severely overexploited in the 1970s and 1980s leading to their abrupt collapse in 1992 1 In ecology overexploitation describes one of the five main activities threatening global biodiversity 3 Ecologists use the term to describe populations that are harvested at an unsustainable rate given their natural rates of mortality and capacities for reproduction This can result in extinction at the population level and even extinction of whole species In conservation biology the term is usually used in the context of human economic activity that involves the taking of biological resources or organisms in larger numbers than their populations can withstand 4 The term is also used and defined somewhat differently in fisheries hydrology and natural resource management Overexploitation can lead to resource destruction including extinctions However it is also possible for overexploitation to be sustainable as discussed below in the section on fisheries In the context of fishing the term overfishing can be used instead of overexploitation as can overgrazing in stock management overlogging in forest management overdrafting in aquifer management and endangered species in species monitoring Overexploitation is not an activity limited to humans Introduced predators and herbivores for example can overexploit native flora and fauna Contents 1 History 2 Overview 2 1 Tragedy of the commons 3 Sectors 3 1 Fisheries 3 2 Water resources 3 3 Forestry 4 Biodiversity 5 Endangered and extinct species 5 1 Vertebrates 5 1 1 Birds 5 1 2 Mammals 5 1 3 Fish 5 1 4 Various 5 2 Invertebrates 5 3 Plants 6 Cascade effects 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingHistory Edit When the giant flightless birds called moa were overexploited to the point of extinction 5 the giant Haast s eagle that preyed on them also became extinct 6 Concern about overexploitation is relatively recent though overexploitation itself is not a new phenomenon It has been observed for millennia For example ceremonial cloaks worn by the Hawaiian kings were made from the mamo bird a single cloak used the feathers of 70 000 birds of this now extinct species The dodo a flightless bird from Mauritius is another well known example of overexploitation As with many island species it was naive about certain predators allowing humans to approach and kill it with ease 7 From the earliest of times hunting has been an important human activity as a means of survival There is a whole history of overexploitation in the form of overhunting The overkill hypothesis Quaternary extinction events explains why the megafaunal extinctions occurred within a relatively short period This can be traced to human migration The most convincing evidence of this theory is that 80 of the North American large mammal species disappeared within 1000 years of the arrival of humans on the western hemisphere continents 8 The fastest ever recorded extinction of megafauna occurred in New Zealand where by 1500 AD just 200 years after settling the islands ten species of the giant moa birds were hunted to extinction by the Maori 5 A second wave of extinctions occurred later with European settlement In more recent times overexploitation has resulted in the gradual emergence of the concepts of sustainability and sustainable development which has built on other concepts such as sustainable yield 9 eco development 10 11 and deep ecology 12 13 Overview EditOverexploitation does not necessarily lead to the destruction of the resource nor is it necessarily unsustainable However depleting the numbers or amount of the resource can change its quality For example footstool palm is a wild palm tree found in Southeast Asia Its leaves are used for thatching and food wrapping and overharvesting has resulted in its leaf size becoming smaller Tragedy of the commons Edit Main article Tragedy of the commons Cows on Selsley Common The tragedy of the commons is a useful parable for understanding how overexploitation can occur In 1968 the journal Science published an article by Garrett Hardin entitled The Tragedy of the Commons 14 It was based on a parable that William Forster Lloyd published in 1833 to explain how individuals innocently acting in their own self interest can overexploit and destroy a resource that they all share 15 pages needed Lloyd described a simplified hypothetical situation based on medieval land tenure in Europe Herders share common land on which they are each entitled to graze their cows In Hardin s article it is in each herder s individual interest to graze each new cow that the herder acquires on the common land even if the carrying capacity of the common is exceeded which damages the common for all the herders The self interested herder receives all of the benefits of having the additional cow while all the herders share the damage to the common However all herders reach the same rational decision to buy additional cows and graze them on the common which eventually destroys the common Hardin concludes Therein is the tragedy Each man is locked into a system that compels him to increase his herd without limit in a world that is limited Ruin is the destination toward which all men rush each pursuing his own interest in a society that believes in the freedom of the commons Freedom in a commons brings ruin to all 14 1244 In the course of his essay Hardin develops the theme drawing in many examples of latter day commons such as national parks the atmosphere oceans rivers and fish stocks The example of fish stocks had led some to call this the tragedy of the fishers 16 A major theme running through the essay is the growth of human populations with the Earth s finite resources being the general common The tragedy of the commons has intellectual roots tracing back to Aristotle who noted that what is common to the greatest number has the least care bestowed upon it 17 as well as to Hobbes and his Leviathan 18 The opposite situation to a tragedy of the commons is sometimes referred to as a tragedy of the anticommons a situation in which rational individuals acting separately collectively waste a given resource by underutilizing it The tragedy of the commons can be avoided if it is appropriately regulated Hardin s use of commons has frequently been misunderstood leading Hardin to later remark that he should have titled his work The tragedy of the unregulated commons 19 Sectors EditFisheries Edit Further information Overfishing and Sustainable fishery The Atlantic bluefin tuna is currently overexploited Scientists say 7 500 tons annually is the sustainable limit yet the fishing industry continue to harvest 60 000 tons In wild fisheries overexploitation or overfishing occurs when a fish stock has been fished down below the size that on average would support the long term maximum sustainable yield of the fishery 20 However overexploitation can be sustainable 21 When a fishery starts harvesting fish from a previously unexploited stock the biomass of the fish stock will decrease since harvesting means fish are being removed For sustainability the rate at which the fish replenish biomass through reproduction must balance the rate at which the fish are being harvested If the harvest rate is increased then the stock biomass will further decrease At a certain point the maximum harvest yield that can be sustained will be reached and further attempts to increase the harvest rate will result in the collapse of the fishery This point is called the maximum sustainable yield and in practice usually occurs when the fishery has been fished down to about 30 of the biomass it had before harvesting started 22 It is possible to fish the stock down further to say 15 of the pre harvest biomass and then adjust the harvest rate so the biomass remains at that level In this case the fishery is sustainable but is now overexploited because the stock has been run down to the point where the sustainable yield is less than it could be Fish stocks are said to collapse if their biomass declines by more than 95 percent of their maximum historical biomass Atlantic cod stocks were severely overexploited in the 1970s and 1980s leading to their abrupt collapse in 1992 1 Even though fishing has ceased the cod stocks have failed to recover 1 The absence of cod as the apex predator in many areas has led to trophic cascades 1 About 25 of world fisheries are now overexploited to the point where their current biomass is less than the level that maximizes their sustainable yield 23 These depleted fisheries can often recover if fishing pressure is reduced until the stock biomass returns to the optimal biomass At this point harvesting can be resumed near the maximum sustainable yield 24 The tragedy of the commons can be avoided within the context of fisheries if fishing effort and practices are regulated appropriately by fisheries management One effective approach may be assigning some measure of ownership in the form of individual transferable quotas ITQs to fishermen In 2008 a large scale study of fisheries that used ITQs and ones that did not provided strong evidence that ITQs help prevent collapses and restore fisheries that appear to be in decline 25 26 Water resources Edit Further information Overdrafting and Water scarcity Water resources such as lakes and aquifers are usually renewable resources which naturally recharge the term fossil water is sometimes used to describe aquifers which do not recharge Overexploitation occurs if a water resource such as the Ogallala Aquifer is mined or extracted at a rate that exceeds the recharge rate that is at a rate that exceeds the practical sustained yield Recharge usually comes from area streams rivers and lakes An aquifer which has been overexploited is said to be overdrafted or depleted Forests enhance the recharge of aquifers in some locales although generally forests are a major source of aquifer depletion 27 28 Depleted aquifers can become polluted with contaminants such as nitrates or permanently damaged through subsidence or through saline intrusion from the ocean This turns much of the world s underground water and lakes into finite resources with peak usage debates similar to oil 29 30 These debates usually centre around agriculture and suburban water usage but generation of electricity from nuclear energy or coal and tar sands mining is also water resource intensive 31 A modified Hubbert curve applies to any resource that can be harvested faster than it can be replaced 32 Though Hubbert s original analysis did not apply to renewable resources their overexploitation can result in a Hubbert like peak This has led to the concept of peak water Forestry Edit Further information Overlogging Clear cutting of old growth forests in Canada Forests are overexploited when they are logged at a rate faster than reforestation takes place Reforestation competes with other land uses such as food production livestock grazing and living space for further economic growth Historically utilization of forest products including timber and fuel wood have played a key role in human societies comparable to the roles of water and cultivable land Today developed countries continue to utilize timber for building houses and wood pulp for paper In developing countries almost three billion people rely on wood for heating and cooking 33 Short term economic gains made by conversion of forest to agriculture or overexploitation of wood products typically leads to loss of long term income and long term biological productivity West Africa Madagascar Southeast Asia and many other regions have experienced lower revenue because of overexploitation and the consequent declining timber harvests 34 Biodiversity Edit The rich diversity of marine life inhabiting coral reefs attracts bioprospectors Many coral reefs are overexploited threats include coral mining cyanide and blast fishing and overfishing in general Overexploitation is one of the main threats to global biodiversity 3 Other threats include pollution introduced and invasive species habitat fragmentation habitat destruction 3 uncontrolled hybridization 35 climate change 36 ocean acidification 37 and the driver behind many of these human overpopulation 38 One of the key health issues associated with biodiversity is drug discovery and the availability of medicinal resources 39 A significant proportion of drugs are natural products derived directly or indirectly from biological sources Marine ecosystems are of particular interest in this regard 40 However unregulated and inappropriate bioprospecting could potentially lead to overexploitation ecosystem degradation and loss of biodiversity 41 42 43 Endangered and extinct species Edit It is not just humans that overexploit resources Overgrazing can be caused by native fauna as shown in the upper right However past human overexploitation leading to elimination of some predators may be behind the situation Species from all groups of fauna and flora are affected by overexploitation All living organisms require resources to survive Overexploitation of these resources for protracted periods can deplete natural stocks to the point where they are unable to recover within a short time frame Humans have always harvested food and other resources they have needed to survive Human populations historically were small and methods of collection limited to small quantities With an exponential increase in human population expanding markets and increasing demand combined with improved access and techniques for capture are causing the exploitation of many species beyond sustainable levels 44 In practical terms if continued it reduces valuable resources to such low levels that their exploitation is no longer sustainable and can lead to the extinction of a species in addition to having dramatic unforeseen effects on the ecosystem 45 Overexploitation often occurs rapidly as markets open utilising previously untapped resources or locally used species The Carolina parakeet was hunted to extinction Today overexploitation and misuse of natural resources is an ever present threat for species richness This is more prevalent when looking at island ecology and the species that inhabit them as islands can be viewed as the world in miniature Island endemic populations are more prone to extinction from overexploitation as they often exist at low densities with reduced reproductive rates 46 A good example of this are island snails such as the Hawaiian Achatinella and the French Polynesian Partula Achatinelline snails have 15 species listed as extinct and 24 critically endangered 47 while 60 species of partulidae are considered extinct with 14 listed as critically endangered 48 The WCMC have attributed over collecting and very low lifetime fecundity for the extreme vulnerability exhibited among these species 49 As another example when the humble hedgehog was introduced to the Scottish island of Uist the population greatly expanded and took to consuming and overexploiting shorebird eggs with drastic consequences for their breeding success Twelve species of avifauna are affected with some species numbers being reduced by 39 50 Where there is substantial human migration civil unrest or war controls may no longer exist With civil unrest for example in the Congo and Rwanda firearms have become common and the breakdown of food distribution networks in such countries leaves the resources of the natural environment vulnerable 51 Animals are even killed as target practice or simply to spite the government Populations of large primates such as gorillas and chimpanzees ungulates and other mammals may be reduced by 80 or more by hunting and certain species may be eliminated altogether 52 This decline has been called the bushmeat crisis Vertebrates Edit Overexploitation threatens one third of endangered vertebrates as well as other groups Excluding edible fish the illegal trade in wildlife is valued at 10 billion per year Industries responsible for this include the trade in bushmeat the trade in Chinese medicine and the fur trade 53 The Convention for International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora or CITES was set up in order to control and regulate the trade in endangered animals It currently protects to a varying degree some 33 000 species of animals and plants It is estimated that a quarter of the endangered vertebrates in the United States of America and half of the endangered mammals is attributed to overexploitation 3 54 Birds Edit Further information List of extinct birds in the wild and List of extinct bird species since 1500 Overall 50 bird species that have become extinct since 1500 approximately 40 of the total have been subject to overexploitation 55 including Great Auk the penguin like bird of the north was hunted for its feathers meat fat and oil Carolina parakeet The only parrot species native to the eastern United States was hunted for crop protection and its feathers Mammals Edit Further information List of recently extinct mammals The international trade in fur chinchilla vicuna giant otter and numerous cat speciesFish Edit Further information List of recently extinct fishes Aquarium hobbyists tropical fishVarious Edit Novelty pets snakes parrots primates and big cats 56 Chinese medicine bears tigers rhinos seahorses Asian black bear and saiga antelope 57 Invertebrates Edit Further information List of recently extinct invertebrates Insect collectors butterflies Shell collectors Marine molluscsPlants Edit Further information List of recently extinct plants Horticulturists New Zealand mistletoe Trilepidea adamsii orchids cacti and many other plant speciesCascade effects Edit Overexploiting sea otters resulted in cascade effects which destroyed kelp forest ecosystems Overexploitation of species can result in knock on or cascade effects This can particularly apply if through overexploitation a habitat loses its apex predator Because of the loss of the top predator a dramatic increase in their prey species can occur In turn the unchecked prey can then overexploit their own food resources until population numbers dwindle possibly to the point of extinction A classic example of cascade effects occurred with sea otters Starting before the 17th century and not phased out until 1911 sea otters were hunted aggressively for their exceptionally warm and valuable pelts which could fetch up to 2500 US This caused cascade effects through the kelp forest ecosystems along the Pacific Coast of North America 58 One of the sea otters primary food sources is the sea urchin When hunters caused sea otter populations to decline an ecological release of sea urchin populations occurred The sea urchins then overexploited their main food source kelp creating urchin barrens areas of seabed denuded of kelp but carpeted with urchins No longer having food to eat the sea urchin became locally extinct as well Also since kelp forest ecosystems are homes to many other species the loss of the kelp caused other cascade effects of secondary extinctions 59 In 1911 when only one small group of 32 sea otters survived in a remote cove an international treaty was signed to prevent further exploitation of the sea otters Under heavy protection the otters multiplied and repopulated the depleted areas which slowly recovered More recently with declining numbers of fish stocks again due to overexploitation killer whales have experienced a food shortage and have been observed feeding on sea otters again reducing their numbers 60 See also EditCarrying capacity Common pool resource Conservation biology Defaunation Deforestation Ecosystem management Exploitation of natural resources Extinction Human overpopulation Inverse commons Over consumption Overpopulation in wild animals Paradox of enrichment Planetary boundaries Social dilemma Sustainability Tyranny of small decisionsReferences Edit a b c d Frank Kenneth T Petrie Brian Choi Jae S Leggett William C 2005 Trophic Cascades in a Formerly Cod Dominated Ecosystem Science 308 5728 1621 1623 Bibcode 2005Sci 308 1621F doi 10 1126 science 1113075 PMID 15947186 S2CID 45088691 Ehrlich Paul R Ehrlich Anne H 1972 Population Resources Environment Issues in Human Ecology 2nd ed W H Freeman and Company p 127 ISBN 0716706954 a b c d Wilcove D S Rothstein D Dubow J Phillips A Losos E 1998 Quantifying threats to imperiled species in the United States BioScience 48 8 607 615 doi 10 2307 1313420 JSTOR 1313420 Oxford 1996 Oxford Dictionary of Biology Oxford University Press a b Holdaway R N Jacomb C 2000 Rapid 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Press Feeny D et al 1990 The Tragedy of the Commons Twenty two years later Human Ecology 18 1 1 19 doi 10 1007 BF00889070 PMID 12316894 S2CID 13357517 Will commons sense dawn again in time The Japan Times Online NOAA fisheries glossary repository library noaa gov NOAA Retrieved 2021 06 13 Source Bolden E G Robinson W L 1999 Wildlife ecology and management 4th ed Prentice Hall Inc Upper Saddle River NJ ISBN 0 13 840422 4 Grafton R Q Kompas T Hilborn R W 2007 Economics of Overexploitation Revisited Science 318 5856 1601 Bibcode 2007Sci 318 1601G doi 10 1126 science 1146017 PMID 18063793 S2CID 41738906 Rosenberg A A 2003 Managing to the margins the overexploitation of fisheries Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 1 2 102 106 doi 10 1890 1540 9295 2003 001 0102 MTTMTO 2 0 CO 2 New Scientist Guaranteed fish quotas halt commercial free for all A Rising Tide Scientists find proof that privatising fishing stocks can avert a disaster The Economist 18th Sept 2008 Underlying Causes of Deforestation UN Report World Rainforest Movement Archived from the original on 2001 04 11 Conrad C 2008 06 21 Forests of eucalyptus shadowed by questions Arizona Daily Star Archived from the original on 2008 12 06 Retrieved 2010 02 07 World s largest aquifer going dry U S Water News Online February 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 09 13 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Larsen J 2005 04 07 Disappearing Lakes Shrinking Seas Selected Examples Earth Policy Institute Archived from the original on 2006 09 03 Retrieved 2009 01 26 http www epa gov cleanrgy water resource htm permanent dead link Palaniappan Meena amp Gleick Peter H 2008 The World s Water 2008 2009 Ch 1 PDF Pacific Institute Archived from the original PDF on 2009 03 20 Retrieved 2009 01 31 http atlas aaas org pdf 63 66 pdf Archived 2011 07 24 at the Wayback Machine Forest Products Destruction of Renewable Resources Rhymer Judith M Simberloff Daniel 1996 Extinction by Hybridization and Introgression Annual Review of Ecology and 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491 493 doi 10 1639 0044 7447 2002 031 0491 beoead 2 0 co 2 JSTOR 4315292 PMID 12436849 Cole Andrew 2005 Looking for new compounds in sea is endangering ecosystem BMJ 330 7504 1350 doi 10 1136 bmj 330 7504 1350 d PMC 558324 PMID 15947392 COHAB Initiative on Natural Products and Medicinal Resources Cohabnet org Archived from the original on 2017 10 25 Retrieved 2009 06 21 Redford 1992 Fitzgibon et al 1995 Cuaron 2001 Frankham R Ballou J D Briscoe D A 2002 Introduction to Conservation Genetics New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 63014 6 Dowding J E Murphy E C 2001 The Impact of Predation be Introduced Mammals on Endemic Shorebirds in New Zealand A Conservation Perspective Biological Conservation 99 1 47 64 doi 10 1016 S0006 3207 00 00187 7 IUCN Red List 2003b IUCN Red List 2003c Retrieved 9 December 2003 WCMC 1992 McComb J Groombridge B Byford E Allan C Howland J Magin C Smith H Greenwood V and Simpson L 1992 World Conservation Monitoring Centre Chapman and Hall Jackson D B Fuller R J Campbell S T 2004 Long term Population Changes Among Breeding Shorebirds in the Outer Hebrides Scotland In Relation to Introduced Hedgehogs Erinaceus europaeus Biological Conservation 117 2 151 166 doi 10 1016 S0006 3207 03 00289 1 Jones R F 1990 Farewell to Africa Audubon 92 1547 1551 Wilkie D S Carpenter J F 1999 Bushmeat hunting in the Congo Basin An assessment of impacts and options for migration Biodiversity and Conservation 8 7 927 955 doi 10 1023 A 1008877309871 S2CID 27363244 Hemley 1994 Primack R B 2002 Essentials of Conservation Biology 3rd ed Sunderland Sinauer Associates ISBN 978 0 87893 719 6 The LUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2009 THE EXOTIC PET DEMIC UK S TICKING TIMEBOMB EXPOSED Born Free Foundation and the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals September 2021 Collins Nick 2012 04 12 Chinese medicines contain traces of endangered animals The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on April 12 2012 Estes J A Duggins D O Rathbun G B 1989 The ecology of extinctions in kelp forest communities Conservation Biology 3 3 251 264 doi 10 1111 j 1523 1739 1989 tb00085 x Dayton P K Tegner M J Edwards P B Riser K L 1998 Sliding baselines ghosts and reduced expectations in kelp forest communities Ecol Appl 8 2 309 322 doi 10 1890 1051 0761 1998 008 0309 SBGARE 2 0 CO 2 Krebs C J 2001 Ecology 5th ed San Francisco Benjamin Cummings ISBN 978 0 321 04289 7 Further reading EditFAO 2005 Overcoming factors of unsustainability and overexploitation in fisheries Fisheries report 782 Rome ISBN 978 92 5 105449 9 We ve overexploited the planet now we need to change if we re to survive Patrick Vallance for The Guardian July 8 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Overexploitation amp oldid 1133578687, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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