3.1 Biodiversity and Conservation
3.2 Origins
3.3 Threats
3.4 Conservation
100

What is Biodiversity?

A broad concept encompassing the total diversity of living systems, which includes the diversity of species, habitat diversity and genetic diversity.

100

How can biological variation arise?

mutation, sexual reproduction (random mating and fertilisation), crossing over of homologous chromosomes. 

100

How do current rates of extinction compare to natural rates? 

Much higher than predicted naturally by up to 100 times 

100

What is the difference between species and habitat conservation

Habitat based approach (Ex situ) - improve the probability of survival of the species by taking them out of their habitat and breeding them in captivity; with the intention of re-introducing them back into the wild in the future.

  • Captive breeding and zoos
  • Botanical gardens and seed banks

Species based approach (In situ) - focuses on conserving the species in their natural habitat.

  • CITI (Conservation on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
  • Flagship species
  • Keystone species
200

Why is it useful to provide numerical values of species diversity to understand communities?

Diversity indices provide more information about community composition than simply species richness (i.e., the number of species present); they also take the relative abundances of different species into account. Diversity indices provide important information about rarity and commonness of species in a community.

200

Define speciation

It is the formation of new species when populations of a species become isolated and evolve differently from other populations.

200

Explain two human activities causing species loss. 

Deforestation/logging/loss of habitat

Pollution/Overuse of fossil fuels contrib. to climate change

Invasive species

Etc.

200

Give an economic, social and ecological reason for conserving biodiversity. 

Examples:

Economic: Unique species (particularly plants) may contain medicines for humans that could be sold at a profit

Social: Abundance of species is more pleasing aethetically to look at, outdoors activities are more interesting with biodiversity (i.e.scuba diving)

Ecological: We have a moral obligation to conserve life

300

True/False: Low diversity is not found in pristine ecosystems.

False - low diversity can be present in natural, ancient and unpolluted sites (for example, in Arctic ecosystems).

300

What is a result of every extinction event?

Widespread species loss leading to a boom of new species adapting and evolving.

300

What threats do tropical biomes face?

Deforestation/logging, poaching of animals, overcultivation of land, pollution, invasive species, human activity/land disturbance, erosion, etc.

300

Explain the criteria for consideration when designing protected areas. 

Answer should refer to at least 3 of the following: size, shape, edge effects, corridors, and proximity to potential human influence.

400

Species diversity is the product of which two variables?

It is a product of two variables: the number of species (richness) and their relative proportions (evenness).

400

Identify two possible causes of past extinctions

asteroid impact, volcanic activity leading to climate change, global cooling, sea level change due to glacier formation

400

List 3 factors that are used to classify the status of a species on the IUCN Red List. 

population size, degree of specialization, distribution, reproductive potential and behaviour, geographic range and degree of fragmentation, quality of habitat, trophic level, and the probability of extinction.

400

Outline a specific species based approach to conservation. 

I.e.

Flagship species

Keystone species

500

Distinguish between species, habitat, and genetic diversity. 

SD: the number of different species that are represented in a given community

HD: refers to the range of different habitats in an ecosystem or biome.

GD: The range of genetic material present in a population of a species.

500

Outline the mechanism of natural selection

1. Within a population of one species, there is genetic diversity, which is called variation.

2. Due to natural variation, some individuals will be fitter than others.

3. Fitter individuals have an advantage and will reproduce more successfully than individuals who are less fit.

4. The offspring of fitter individuals may inherit the genes that give that advantage.

500

Provide an overview of a species that has a) become extinct due to human activity, b) is critically endangered, or c) whose conservation status has been improved by intervention.

Answers will vary

500

Evaluate the success of a named protected area.

Answers will vary


Appropriate criteria should include size, shape, edge effects, corridors and proximity.


  • size - larger space allows for larger populations and gene pools, and a wider variety of species
  • shape - round is better than all other shapes because it reduces the edge effect
  • edge effects - less edge is better; edge creates differences in the structure of an ecosystem, called an ecotone (an area where 2 habitats meet), which influences what may successfully live there.
  • corridors - provide safe passage between protected areas
  • proximity - if protected areas are close to other protected areas, they are more effective than isolated islands