What are the source of income from boidiversuty ? Mention any 7.
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Maintaining biodiversity is essential for organic waste
disposal, soil formation, biological nitrogen fixation, crop and
livestock genetics, biological pest control, plant pollination, and
pharmaceuticals. Plants and microbes help to degrade chemical pollutants
and organic wastes and cycle nutrients through the ecosystem. For
example:
Pollinators, including bees and butterflies, provide
significant environmental and economic benefits to agricultural and
natural ecosystems, including adding diversity and productivity to food
crops. As many as one-third of the world’s food production relies
directly or indirectly on insect pollination. About 130 of the crops
gown in the United States are insect pollinated. Habitat fragmentation
and loss adversely affects pollinator food sources, nesting sites, and
mating sites, causing precipitous declines in the populations of wild
pollinators.There are 6 million tons of food products harvested annually
from terrestrial wild biota in the United States including large and
small animals, maple syrup, nuts, blueberries and algae. The 6 billion
tons of food are valued at $57 million and add $3 billion to the
country’s economy (1995 calculations).Approximately 75% (by weight) of the 100,000 chemicals
released into the environment can be degraded by biological organisms
and are potential targets of both bioremediation and biotreatment. The
savings gained by using bioremediation instead of the other available
techniques; physical, chemical and thermal; to remediate chemical
pollution worldwide give an annual benefit of $135 billion (1997
calculation). Maintaining biodiversity in soils and water is imperative
to the continued and improved effectiveness of bioremediation and
biotreatment.
Biodiversity is essential for the sustainable functioning of the
agricultural, forest, and natural ecosystems on which humans depend,
but human activities, especially the development of natural lands, are
causing a species extinction rate of 1,000 to 10,000 times the natural
rate.The authors estimate that in the United States, biodiversity
provides a total of $319 billion dollars in annual benefits and $2,928
billion in annual benefits worldwide (1997 calculation)
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