BACKGROUND:
Human settlement and associated landscape changes have
taken their toll on native wildlife across the planet - for the most part
through habitat elimination or alteration. We are now at a critical juncture
with respect to both our attitudes and actions relative to wildlife habitat
if there is going to be any meaningful preservation of biodiversity in
our natural wildlife heritage.
One thing is certain; for these species to survive
there must be sufficient space to meet their minimal needs, and often some
means of travel between disconnected habitat spaces. Soon after the year
2000 the U.S. population will reach ~300 million. Can wildlife still have
their place in the midst of so many people and their demands on the land?
We remain optimistic, but only if we show a commitment
and creativity in our management and planning of our use of the landscape.
Much has been done, yet much remains. An inventory of our current habitat
available to natural wildlife varies, from exceptional examples of large
portions of land which are well managed, to examples where species have
little chance for survival.
Because of the interconnected nature of human activities,
the nature of much of our remaining habitat is in the form of islands of
natural landscape surrounded by areas where the use is inhospitable to
natural wildlife. The fragmentation of natural habitat into isolated islands
emphasizes three aspects of habitat which have become increasingly important
to scientists, environmentalists and government planners alike: the importance
of habitat island size, stability, and the existence of corridors to connect
the individual habitat islands.
Great efforts are being made to increase the size and
stability of these islands of habitat into substantial tracts of land which
don't only favor those species of plants and animals which can live and
thrive near the edge of natural conditions, but also those species which
need substantial natural buffers for their continued existence.
This effort is complimented by efforts to establish
corridors which serve as connections between habitat islands. These corridors
allow for the movement of species to and from habitat islands as the individual
habitat's relative ability to support the species changes.
This is the current interface between what remains
in the way of natural habitat and what scientists, environmentalists and
planners will negotiate and develop to assure the existence of a stabalizing
biodiversity necessary for a thriving biosphere of which we are a part.
It is the intention of this web module to provide you and your students
access to information, activities, and interactions which can make you
and them a part of this important and exciting process.