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Check revised lecture notes!

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Check revised lecture notes!. Time Line. 1.8 MYBP Beginning of Pleistocene 1.7 MYBP Ancestral mammoth arrives in America ~ 0.2 MYBP Modern humans evolve in Africa ~ 0.015 MYBP Modern humans arrive in America 0.01 MYBP 135 spp. extinct, last glacial retreat. Dispersal of Humans. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Check revised lecture notes!
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Page 1: Check revised lecture notes!

Check revised lecture notes!

Page 2: Check revised lecture notes!

Time Line

• 1.8 MYBP Beginning of Pleistocene• 1.7 MYBP Ancestral mammoth arrives in

America• ~ 0.2 MYBP Modern humans evolve in Africa• ~ 0.015 MYBP Modern humans arrive in

America• 0.01 MYBP 135 spp. extinct, last glacial retreat

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Dispersal of Humans

Nature 7 Dec. 2000 p. 653.

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Climate Change in Pleistocene

Humans arrivein Australia

Humans arrivein America

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Australia

• Colonized ~ 50,000 years ago.

• No global warming at this time.

• Offers a natural experiment to compare human predation and climate change.

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Gifford Miller, 1999

Genyornis

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Genyornis (1999 Research!)

Miller et al., 1999. Science 283: 205-208

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Summary (but 8 years ago!)

• “From consideration of all of these stories for different continents there does not appear to any one factor responsible for the late Pleistocene extinctions . . . What is likely is that the primary lethal effect was the combination of these factors, acting in a synergistic manner on a fauna unaccustomed to so many disruptions at once.” Burney 1993.

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My Opinion

• Human Hunting– Almost certainly– More work needed on early social structure

• Humans as Disease Vectors– Intriguing

• Predator-Prey Theory– Not an issue in America or Australia– Relevant to Africa

• Climate Change– Probably a factor in America

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Are we on the verge of a

MASS EXTINCTION?

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Review: Deterministic Threats

• Change in physical environment– climate change

– habitat destruction

– pollution

• Change in biotic environment– Competition

– Predation (including disease and human hunting)

– Mutualism

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Current Extinction Methods of Humans

• Overkill (Stellar’s sea cow)

• Introduced species– predators, disease, competitors

• Habitat destruction

• Global climate change

• Warfare

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The Last Stellar’s Sea Cow, 1768

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Whales Hunted to Near Extinction

• 1800’s - A record three year cruise killed < 100 whales.

• 1933 - ~30,000 whales killed, 2.5 million barrels of whale oil.

• 1967 - ~60,000 whales killed, 1.5 million barrels of oil

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Brown tree snake(Guam rail)

Tibbles eats allStephan Island Wrens (1894)

W.B. Espeut introducesmongooses onto Jamaica (1872)

Domestic animalsbecome feral predators

Introduced Predators

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Bird Extinctions in Eastern N.A.

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The Heath Hen: Multiple Causes

Nature Conservancy magazine July/August 1998 p. 8-9

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Disease

New Scientist 5 August 2000 p.35. Article by Debora MacKenzie

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Humans and Disease

http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/287/5452/443

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Lyme Disease

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Deforestation

• 110,000 km2 per year, 20 hectares per minute (A. Sommer, 1976)

• 55 km2 per year (an area the size of WV), 10 hectares per minute (P. and A. Ehrlich

• 150,000 km2 per year, 25 hectares per minute, one football field every second (N. Myers 1989).

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Deforestation


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