π£ Overexploitation
Overexploitation is taking too much, too quickly.
When the removal rate is higher than reproduction or regrowth, populations decline and may collapse.
How this affects food webs: Overexploitation is a direct human impact because organisms (animals, fish, or plants) are removed faster than they can be replaced. This interrupts energy transfer between trophic levels and can trigger trophic cascades.
Overexploitation = unsustainable use (take > replace).
Examples
- Overfishing: populations fall, food webs change β Atlantic cod collapsed by ~99% by the 1990s and is still recovering decades later
- Poaching: removes breeding adults β rapid decline β elephants killed for ivory, rhinos for horns
- Logging: old-growth forests cut faster than they regrow β ancient forests cleared before full ecological recovery
Always link to biodiversity: fewer individuals β fewer species β lower resilience (use a named example such as Atlantic cod or elephant poaching).