The first issue that I am going to explain is how bees are dying off in alarming rates. This is not related to the runoff of the pesticides that are used in agriculture, but a separate threat. The different types of pesticides are “working their way into the pollen and nectar of the plants” (Kelmn p. 2). This type of pollution ends up getting onto the bees when they transport the pollen around to pollenate plants, like they have done for thousands of years. But this pesticide in the pollen is roughly 6000 times more powerful than the famous DDT pesticide that was harming bald eagle populations a while back. Bees are vital in pollination and therefore play a significant role in the produce industry. Without them we will not be able to pollenate …show more content…
This occurs in many parts of the world but Florida is one that is in the spotlight due to the amount of money that people have. Invasive species are becoming a threat to the natural environment in the oceans and the terrestrial areas of Florida. Most of the time they are pets that are exotic or foreign to the land. Then once they get to large for their cage or dwelling they are released into the wild here in Florida and other parts of the states and world. They naturally have no predators in this new ecosystem and they flourish. If the invasive species meets up with a mate and they reproduce, suddenly that whole litter of offspring have no predators and they have everything to eat. Therefore these species flourish. They decimate ecosystems by eating, or eating the food sources of native species. One example is the lionfish. I recently read an article while waiting to get my tires rotated, that lion fish are everywhere in Florida’s reefs and waters. To the point where it is becoming alarming to biologists and ecologists alike. They apparently can reproduce at staggering rates and have no natural enemies. They have taken over the reefs in Florida so much that spear fisherman can come up with 80 or 90 in a single day of spearfishing. This is terrible for the ecosystem and could end up hurting the environment all together if the lionfish take over completely and eliminate the native population of fish.