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of ecosystems, most species and their genetic diversity can be protected as well (Hunter 1991; Beier et al. 2015a). This idea is often described using a metaphor of coarse filters and fine filters first proposed by The Nature Conservancy (1982) (Fig. 4.8). The coarse‐filter approach to conserving biodiversity is appealing because it is efficient and provides broad protection. It is efficient because, compared with the number of species in the world, there are relatively few different types of ecosystems and thus protecting a representative array of these is comparatively straightforward. It is broad because it will protect, to some degree, little‐known species such as invertebrates and fungi, even undescribed species, plus their genetic diversity. The Nature Conservancy (1982) originally estimated that 85–90% of species could be protected this way, although this seems optimistic based on the few empirical tests that have been undertaken (e.g. MacNally et al. 2002; Grantham et al. 2010).

Schematic illustration of the strategic value of ecosystems that is described by the coarse-filter–fine-filter approach to conserving biodiversity.

      Importantly, the coarse‐filter approach can be an effective strategy regardless of whether ecosystems are tightly connected systems or loose assemblages of species (Fig. 4.3). It is only necessary that the distribution of species and their habitats have some degree of concordance so that a complete array of ecosystems will harbor a reasonably complete array of species (Hunter et al. 1988; Rodrigues and Brooks 2007). We will return to this point and the coarse‐filter approach in general in Chapter 11, “Protecting Ecosystems.” Finally, it is notable that some ecosystems are analogous to flagship species; that is, they elicit public concern about conservation writ large. Tropical rain forests and coral reefs are perhaps the best examples of this phenomenon, but others, such as traditional agricultural ecosystems with high cultural value, are emerging as a new emblem for biodiversity conservation (Chapter 14, “Conservation near People”).

      Uniqueness Values

Photo depicts the forests of Socotra, a small remote island.

      (Ovchinnikova Irina/Shutterstock)

      Diversity and Stability

      Conservation biologists have long been concerned that species extinctions could have dire consequences for the stability of entire ecosystems. This idea is captured in a well‐known metaphor suggested by Anne and Paul Ehrlich (1981). Imagine you were flying in a plane, looked out the window, and saw a rivet fall out of the wing. You might not worry too much because there are thousands of rivets in a plane, and the loss of one rivet would not make it fall apart and crash. In fact, many rivets could probably fall out before the situation became dangerous, but, eventually, if enough rivets fell out, the plane would crash.

      Three mechanisms for higher diversity increasing ecosystem stability have been proposed by Chapin et al. (1997). First, if there are more species in an ecosystem, then its food web will be more complex, with greater redundancy among species in terms of their ecological niche or role. In other words, in a rich system if a species is lost, there is a good chance that other species will take over its function as prey, predator, producer, decomposer, or whatever. Second, diverse ecosystems may be less likely to be invaded by new species, notably exotics that would disrupt the ecosystem’s structure and function. Third, in a species‐rich ecosystem, diseases may be less likely to spread because most species will be relatively less abundant, thus hampering transmission among individuals, and some disease organisms may be diluted among multiple host species. Variations on these themes have been proposed, such as species‐rich ecosystems being more productive because they use a site’s resources more efficiently, or species‐rich plant communities being less vulnerable to herbivory because of the dilution effect.

      Research to illuminate these ideas has been accumulating, albeit slowly because of an incomplete understanding of what constitutes stability. For example, diverse grasslands are more resistant to being changed by a drought than species‐poor grasslands, but they are not more resilient in terms of recovering quickly after a drought (Isbell et al. 2015). Overall, support

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