Levels of Biodiversity
Ecosystem Services
Island Life
Adaptations & Tolerance
Succession Stories
100

What are the three levels of biodiversity?

Genetic diversity, species diversity, and ecosystem diversity.

100

What are ecosystem services?

Benefits humans obtain from natural ecosystems.

100

What does the Theory of Island Biogeography explain?

Patterns of species richness based on island size and distance from mainland.

100

Define adaptation.

A trait that improves an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce in its environment.

100

Define ecological succession.

Gradual change in species composition of an ecosystem over time.

200

Which level of biodiversity allows species to better resist disease or environmental change?

Genetic diversity.

200

Give one example of a provisioning service.

Food, timber, fresh water, or medicine.

200

How does island size affect species richness?

Larger islands have more habitats and lower extinction rates.

200

What is the range of tolerance?

Range of conditions (e.g., temperature, pH) a species can endure before injury or death.

200

Differentiate between primary and secondary succession.  

Primary starts on bare rock (no soil); secondary starts where soil already exists.

300

Explain the difference between species richness and evenness.

Richness = # of species; evenness = relative abundance of each species.

300

Which type of service includes pollination and soil formation?

Supporting services.

300

How does distance from the mainland affect species richness?

Closer islands receive more immigrants → greater diversity.

300

Which zone of tolerance supports the most growth and reproduction?

The optimal range.

300

What are pioneer species and give an example.

First colonizers in succession (e.g., lichen, moss).

400

Why does high biodiversity increase ecosystem resilience?

More species → functional redundancy → ecosystem can recover from disturbances.

400

Explain how deforestation reduces a regulating service.

Trees no longer store CO₂ or filter air → increased climate change and pollution.

400

What is adaptive radiation and where is it commonly observed?

Rapid speciation from a common ancestor to fill different niches (e.g., Galápagos finches).

400

Explain how climate change can affect a species’ range of tolerance.

Shifts conditions beyond the optimal range → stress, migration, or die-off.

400

Describe how biodiversity changes through succession.

Increases over time as new species colonize and form complex communities.

500

Describe a bottleneck event and its effect on genetic diversity.

A random disturbance reduces population size, decreasing genetic variation and resilience.

500

Identify a cultural service and how it can be economically valuable.

Recreation or tourism (e.g., park fees, ecotourism jobs).

500

Explain why small, isolated islands are more vulnerable to extinction.

Smaller populations + less immigration = lower genetic diversity and higher extinction risk.

500

Why do species with high genetic diversity adapt more quickly to change?

More gene variants → higher chance some individuals survive new conditions.

500

Identify the characteristics of a climax community.

Stable, mature ecosystem with high biodiversity and efficient nutrient cycling.