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may have relatively few species (Fig. 4.10). In particular, many islands support a precious biota of endemic species, but are not very diverse overall; the Galápagos Islands may be the best example of this.

Photo depicts the extreme climatic conditions of a high-latitude or high-elevation ecosystem that are the main reason why they support far fewer species than the coral reef.

      (National Park Service/Public domain)

Photo depicts the fine-scale landscape on the coast of Maine, USA.

      (Drew Tarvin/Flickr/CC BY 2.0)

      Conservation biologists are interested in landscape phenomena for a number of reasons that we will examine further in subsequent chapters. Two brief examples will suffice here. First, many endangered species are large animals that have large home ranges – tigers, wolves, elephants, etc. – that encompass many ecosystems. If we wish to maintain habitat for these species, we must maintain entire landscapes that provide for all their needs. Second, human activities have left many natural ecosystems as islands, isolated in a “sea” of human‐altered ecosystems, and conservation biologists are concerned with what happens along the edges of these small, residual patches. Are they being degraded by factors that originate externally such as exotic species, pesticides, and changes in local climate?

      CASE STUDY 4.1 Mangrove Swamps

Photo depicts mangroves that are marine wetlands that occur along many tropical coastlines.

      (William Warby/Flickr/CC BY 2.0)

      Despite modest levels of plant species diversity, mangrove swamps are important and interesting ecosystems (Kathiresan and Bingham 2001 ; Nagelkerken et al. 2008; Feller et al. 2010). First, they are extremely productive, capturing sunlight and collecting nutrients imported by the tides, and exporting huge amounts of organic matter to the adjacent aquatic ecosystems where they support aquatic food webs and economically valuable fisheries. For some fish species, mangrove swamps are often called nurseries because they provide food and cover for young individuals (Paillon et al. 2014). They also provide a sort of cover for shoreline human communities by creating a buffer against ocean storms and tsunamis. Conversely, they buffer coral‐reef and sea‐grass ecosystems from siltation stemming from inland erosion. Mangrove swamps also provide resources – timber and fuelwood – that sometimes, unfortunately, lead to their overexploitation. Worse than the threat of excessive timber harvesting is the wholesale destruction of mangrove swamps to make room for aquaculture (notably for shrimp production ponds), agriculture, and coastal development (ranging from garbage dumps to high‐rise hotels). Because they occupy a narrow band between the land and the sea, mangrove swamps have never occupied a large total area, and this makes it doubly tragic that so many have been lost. Worldwide, a substantial portion of mangroves have been destroyed, probably leaving far less than 200,000 km2 (Sandilyan and Kathiresan 2012 ; Webb and Friess 2014). This seems particularly short‐sighted given economic studies like one from India that estimated local income of $753/ha/year from natural products tied to mangroves versus $438 from mangroves converted to rice paddies (Chauhan et al. 2017). The mangroves’ value soared to over $5000/ha/year if you add more speculative values such as protection from storms and carbon sequestration.

      The conceptual definition of an ecosystem is straightforward – a group of interacting organisms and their physical environment – but deciding where one ecosystem ends and another begins can be difficult. Evaluating the differences and similarities among many ecosystems and classifying them into different ecosystem types is even more challenging. Despite these difficulties, recognizing and classifying ecosystems are useful exercises for organizing our understanding of the patterns of ecological interactions.

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