Week 5 - Flora & Fauna
Abschlussbedingungen
1. Flora & Fauna
1.2. Indirect activties
The nature and quality of the ecology in an area will determine the effects of activities such as building roads. Activities affecting flora and fauna include:
- Roads / Transport (Fragmentation / Safety)
- Developments (invasive species)
- Coastal infrastructure (marine impacts)
- Water infrastructure (habitat disturbance/ Discharges)
- Agriculture / Farming (biodiversity)
- Power infrastructure (Bird strike)
- Mining (Tailings- Acid)
- Discharges (from all sources e.g. spills)
Fragmentation can present a large problem when building transportation routes. This may cause:
- Separation of ecological communities from new roads through the physical barrier they represent
- Change of nature of the physical environment – habitat impacts (for example, if you build a road through an area where there are natural predators than they may follow the route of the road which changes its behaviour).
- Increases in pedestrian or road traffic resulting in dispersal of weeds and pest species. Railways in particular are responsible for transport and distributing weeds over a large area.
The second image shows an area called Smith's Bush on Auckland's North Shore which was fragmented by a road. Studies since then have observed the gradual decline of the biodiversity on the right of the road.