biodiversity

(noun)

the diversity (number and variety of species) of plant and animal life within a region

Related Terms

  • endemism
  • barcoding
  • adaptive radiation
  • carrion
  • heirloom seed
  • invasive species
  • sustainability
  • extinction
  • keystone species
  • anthropogenic
  • agribusiness

Examples of biodiversity in the following topics:

  • Loss of Biodiversity

    • Human activity is the driving force behind the current biodiversity crisis, which is causing great species loss in a short time period.
    • Biodiversity can be estimated at a number of levels of organization of living things.
    • These estimation indexes, which came from information theory, are most useful as a first step in quantifying biodiversity between and within ecosystems, yet they are less useful when the main concern among conservation biologists is simply the loss of biodiversity.
    • However, biologists recognize that measures of biodiversity, in terms of species diversity, may help focus efforts to preserve the biologically or technologically important elements of biodiversity.
    • The Lake Victoria cichlids provide an example through which we can begin to understand biodiversity.
  • Biodiversity of Plants

    • Plant biodiversity, vital to ecosystems, food crops, and medicine production, is threatened by habitat destruction and species extinction.
    • Rapid deforestation and industrialization, however, threaten plant biodiversity.
    • Biodiversity of plants ensures a resource for new food crops and medicines.
    • Efforts to preserve biodiversity take several lines of action, from preserving heirloom seeds to barcoding species.
    • Indiscriminate logging, which leads to the clearing of whole habitats, has become a severe threat to plant biodiversity and has led to species extinction.
  • Biodiversity Change through Geological Time

    • Biodiversity has been affected by five mass extinction periods, which greatly influenced speciation and extinction rates.
    • Paleontologists have identified five strata in the fossil record that appear to show sudden and dramatic losses in biodiversity known as mass extinctions.
    • The Permian extinction dramatically altered earth's biodiversity composition and the course of evolution.
    • Sudden and dramatic losses of biodiversity, called mass extinctions, have occurred five times.
    • Describe how biodiversity has changed through geological time as a result of mass extinctions
  • Climate Change and Biodiversity

    • The global warming trend is recognized as a major biodiversity threat, especially when combined with other threats such as habitat loss.
  • Human Health and Biodiversity

    • Maintaining biodiversity ultimately helps maintain of human health; many medicines are derived from plants and, recently, animal toxins.
    • It is beneficial to humans, therefore, for medicinal purposes and many others, to maintain biodiversity.
  • Types of Biodiversity

    • Genetic diversity, ecosystem diversity, and human-derived diversity are measures of biodiversity that currently define life on earth.
    • Scientists generally accept that the term biodiversity describes the number and kinds of species in a location or on the planet.
    • Biologists have also identified alternate measures of biodiversity, some of which are important for planning how to preserve biodiversity.
  • Habitat Loss and Sustainability

    • In the process of habitat destruction, the organisms that previously used the site are displaced or destroyed, reducing biodiversity.
    • Consider the exceptional biodiversity of Sumatra.
    • These animals are examples of the exceptional biodiversity of (c) the islands of Sumatra and Borneo.
    • Sustainable practices, which preserve environments for long-term maintenance and well-being, can help preserve habitats and ecosystems for greater biodiversity.
    • Describe the effects of habitat loss to biodiversity and concept of sustainability
  • Ecological Restoration

    • Creating preserves reduces the pressure on human activities outside the preserves to be sustainable and non-damaging to biodiversity.
    • Habitat restoration holds considerable promise as a mechanism for restoring and maintaining biodiversity.
    • However, restoration can improve the biodiversity of degraded ecosystems.
    • Reintroducing wolves, a top predator, to Yellowstone National Park in 1995 led to dramatic changes in the ecosystem that increased biodiversity.
    • The results from the Yellowstone experiment suggest that restoring a keystone species can have the effect of restoring biodiversity in the community .
  • Overharvesting

    • Overharvesting threatens biodiversity by degrading ecosystems and eliminating species of plants, animals, and other organisms.
    • Sustained overharvesting can lead to the destruction of the resource, and is one of the five main activities - along with pollution, introduced species, habitat fragmentation, and habitat destruction - that threaten global biodiversity today.
    • As mentioned above, sustained overharvesting is one of the primary threats to biodiversity.
    • Overharvesting not only threatens the resource being harvested, but can directly impact humans as well - for example by decreasing the biodiversity necessary for medicinal resources.
    • However, unregulated and inappropriate harvesting could potentially lead to overexploitation, ecosystem degradation, and loss of biodiversity; further, it can negatively impact the rights of the communities and states from which the resources are taken.
  • Agricultural Diversity

    • Maintaining genetic biodiversity of wild species of our crops that are related to domesticated species ensures our continued food supply.
    • Resistance to disease is a chief benefit to maintaining crop biodiversity; lack of diversity in contemporary crop species carries similar risks.
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