Two ways this info relates to APES is economic and through food webs. Already I mentioned the potential loss of revenue that comes with a loss of biodiversity. Another point of interest is the conservation costs that are accumulating. The money needed for things like sanctuaries or bounties on invasion species is far into the billions range. The damage to our biodiversity is just as great now as the damage to our wallets. Another point of interest is the connection between biodiversity and the food webs we learned about. When a certain species goes missing from a web, it ultimately allows species above to dwindle and below to flourish. Very rarely does it work out where everything else survives, there is always collapse. The more diverse an ecosystem is, the more stable the web remains.
A question I have is about invasive species. Is there money in hunting these things? This is not an ethics or philosophical question but more about cold hard cash. Can a man make his living traveling abroad and killing all the animals and plants that are doing more harm than good? Maybe that's a good solution to our 2nd amendment infestation.