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Biodiversity (Edexcel IGCSE Biology)
Revision Note
Biodiversity
- Biodiversity is defined as
the range and variety of different species of organisms on Earth, or within an ecosystem
- It considers not only the species richness but the variation within each species, its distribution and population size
- E.g. a high biodiversity would be found in an environment with lots of different species which show a lot of variation and are living in, all evenly distributed across the study area
- Many human activities are reducing biodiversity in individual ecosystems and on a global level
- E.g. waste production, deforestation and global warming
The importance of biodiversity
- Different species depend on each other for:
- Food
- Shelter (eg. birds nesting in trees)
- Maintenance of the physical environment (eg. tree roots provide stability for soils, ensuring they do not get washed away. This in turn provides a stable habitat for other plant species)
- High biodiversity ensures the stability of ecosystems by reducing the dependence of one species on another for these three things
- Populations with high levels of diversity are also more likely to be resilient to sudden environmental impacts or disease
- Consider the food web below:
- If the mouse population was suddenly wiped out, the fox and the hawk populations might decrease but would not be wiped out as mice are not their only food source
- This example ecosystem has sufficient biodiversity to support the fox and hawk populations
- The fox population can still depend on the rabbit and frog populations for food
- The hawk population can still depend on the frog and sparrow populations for food
A food web demonstrates the importance of biodiversity within an ecosystem
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