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🌿 The Impact of Environmental Change

Spec 4.7.4 📙 Higher
📖 In-Depth Theory

Environmental Change and Species Distribution

ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE is any significant alteration to the abiotic or biotic conditions in an ecosystem.
Changes can be:
NATURAL — volcanic eruptions, floods, droughts, ice ages, disease outbreaks.
HUMAN-CAUSED (ANTHROPOGENIC) — deforestation, agriculture, pollution, climate change, invasive species.
Environmental change affects organisms because they are adapted to specific conditions.
If conditions change beyond an organism's tolerance range, it:
MOVES to a more suitable habitat (migration).
Adapts over many generations through natural selection.
BECOMES LOCALLY EXTINCT (extirpation).
BECOMES EXTINCT if it cannot move or adapt quickly enough.
MONITORING ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE:
POPULATION SIZE changes — increases or decreases indicate changes in habitat suitability.
SPECIES DISTRIBUTION — mapping where species occur over time shows range shifts.
INDICATOR SPECIES — species whose presence, absence or population size reflects environmental quality.

Climate Change and Species Distribution

CLIMATE CHANGE is causing measurable shifts in species distributions worldwide.
EFFECTS OF RISING TEMPERATURES:
SPECIES MOVING POLEWARD — organisms whose optimal temperature range is shifting move towards the poles or to higher altitudes. Example: many UK butterfly species have expanded their range northwards in recent decades.
SEASONAL TIMING SHIFTS (PHENOLOGY) — spring events happening earlier: flowers blooming sooner, insects emerging earlier, birds migrating earlier. If these timing shifts don't match between interdependent species (e.g. caterpillar emergence and bird breeding) — MISMATCH occurs → reduced survival.
RANGE CONTRACTION — species at the warm edge of their range find conditions too hot and cannot move further poleward → population declines.
CORAL BLEACHING — warmer oceans cause coral polyps to expel their symbiotic algae → coral turns white and eventually dies if temperatures remain elevated.
EFFECTS OF CHANGED RAINFALL PATTERNS:
Drought-prone areas expand → grasslands may become deserts.
Wetter areas may support new species previously excluded by dryness.
SEA LEVEL RISE:
Coastal and low-lying habitats (salt marshes, mangroves, coral atolls) at risk.
Many coastal species lose their habitat.

Pollution and Habitat Destruction

POLLUTION affects species distribution:
AIR POLLUTION:
SO₂ from burning fossil fuels — indicator species lichens are very sensitive to SO₂ and are absent from polluted urban areas. Their presence indicates clean air.
Nitrogen oxides → acid rain → acidification of soils and rivers → loss of acid-sensitive species.
WATER POLLUTION:
Nitrate and phosphate runoff (eutrophication) → algal blooms → oxygen depletion → fish die.
OIL SPILLS — coat bird feathers and mammal fur → prevents insulation and waterproofing → death. Oil is toxic to many marine organisms.
PLASTIC POLLUTION — entanglement, ingestion by marine animals.
INDICATOR SPECIES for water quality:
Mayfly larvae — only in clean, well-oxygenated water (absent from polluted rivers).
Rat-tailed maggots — tolerate very low oxygen (indicate polluted water).
Bloodworms — intermediate tolerance.
HABITAT DESTRUCTION:
Deforestation, draining of wetlands, urbanisation and agricultural expansion destroy habitats.
Habitat fragmentation — dividing continuous habitats into isolated patches reduces gene flow between populations and increases local extinction risk.
⚠️ Common Mistake

Lichens as indicator species indicate AIR QUALITY (sensitive to SO₂ air pollution). Mayfly larvae indicate WATER QUALITY (sensitive to low oxygen/pollution). Students mix these up. Both are absent from polluted environments — but one tells you about air, the other about water.

📌 Key Note

Environmental change: natural or human-caused. Climate change → species moving poleward, seasonal mismatch, coral bleaching. Indicator species: lichens (air quality), mayfly larvae (water quality). Pollution → eutrophication, acid rain, oil spills. Habitat destruction → fragmentation → extinction risk.

🎯 Matching Activity — Match the Environmental Impact

Match each change to its ecological consequence. — drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

Rising temperatures
Drop here
Eutrophication
Drop here
SO₂ air pollution
Drop here
Phenological mismatch
Drop here
Habitat fragmentation
Drop here
Many UK butterfly species expanding their range northwards
Isolated habitat patches reduce gene flow between populations
Caterpillars emerge earlier due to warmth — but birds don't breed earlier → chicks starve
Algal bloom → oxygen depletion → fish death in rivers
Lichens absent from polluted urban areas — indicator of poor air quality
🎯 Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Scientists find that mayfly larvae are absent from a stretch of river downstream from a farm. What does this suggest?
2. Many bird species in the UK are breeding earlier in the year than they did 50 years ago. What is the most likely cause?
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