Biodiversity and Conservation
Biodiversity and Conservation
Biodiversity and Conservation
BIODIVERSITY AND
CONSERVATION
KEYNOTES 2.0
By: Dr. Anand Mani
LEVELS OF BIODIVERSITY
1. Genetic diversity: Diversity shown by a single species at genetic level. E.g. Rauwolfia vomitoria
(Himalaya) shows genetic variation in the potency & concentration of the chemical reserpine. India
has more than 50,000 different strains of rice and 1000 varieties of mango. (NEET 2013)
2. Species diversity: Diversity at species level. E.g. Western Ghats have more amphibian species
than Eastern Ghats. (NEET 2020)
3. Ecological diversity: Diversity at ecosystem level. E.g. In India, deserts, rain forests, mangroves,
coral reefs, wet lands, estuaries & alpine meadows are seen.
Applying May’s global estimates, India would have more than 1 lakh plant species and 3 lakh
animal species. (NEET 2020)
Biologists are not sure about total number of prokaryotic species because
• Conventional taxonomic methods are not suitable for identifying microbial species.
• In laboratory, many species cannot be cultured.
PATTERNS OF BIODIVERSITY
i. Latitudinal gradients
- Species diversity
E.g. Number of bird species in
decreases from the
different latitudes:
equator to the poles.
Colombia (near equator): about
- Tropics (latitudinal
o 1400 species.
range of 23.5 N to
o India (in tropics): > 1200 species.
23.5 S) have more o
New York (41 N): 105 species.
species than temperate o
Greenland (71 N): 56 species.
or polar areas.
z
S= CA
Where,
S= Species richness
A= Area
C= Y-intercept
Z= slope of the line
(regression co-efficient)
- For very large areas (e.g. entire continents), slope of the line is steeper (Z value: 0.6 to 1.2).
- E.g. for frugivorous birds and mammals in the tropical forests of different continents, the
Z value is 1.15.
LOSS OF BIODIVERSITY
IUCN Red List (2004) says that 784 species (338 vertebrates, 359 invertebrates & 87 plants)
have gone extinct in the last 500 years. (NEET 2016) E.g. Dodo (Mauritius), Quagga (Africa),
Thylacine (Australia), Stellar’s sea cow (Russia) and 3 subspecies (Bali, Javan, Caspian) of tiger.
More than 15,500 species are facing threat of extinction. (NEET 2014)
12% birds, 23% mammals, 32% amphibians, 31% gymnosperm species face the threat of extinction.
The current extinction rate is 100 - 1000 times faster than in the pre-human times. If this trend
continues, nearly 50% species might be extinct within next 100 years.
Increased variability in
Environmental ecosystem processes such
Decline in plant perturbations such as plant productivity,
1 2 3
production. as drought. water use and pest and
disease cycles.
Overexploitation: Stellar’s sea cow, Passenger pigeon etc. extinct due to over exploitation.
Alien species invasions: Alien species cause decline or extinction of indigenous species.E.g.
2
- Nile Perch introduced in Lake Victoria (East Africa) caused extinction of more than 200 species of
4
Co extinction: When a species becomes extinct, the species associated with it are also wiped out.
E.g. - Extinction of the parasites when the host is extinct.
- Co-evolved plant-pollinator mutualism where extinction of one leads to the extinction of the other.
BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
There are 3 categories of reasons for conservation.
A. NARROWLY UTILITARIAN
B. BROADLY UTILITARIAN
ARGUMENTS
ARGUMENTS
- Humans derive economic
Biodiversity has many
benefits from nature such as
ecosystem services. E.g.
food, firewood, fibre, construction
• Amazon forest (‘lung of the
material, industrial products
planet’) produces 20% of total
(tannins, lubricants, dyes, resins,
O2 in the earth’s atmosphere.
perfumes) and medicines.
• Pollination through bees,
- More than 25% of the drugs are
bumblebees, birds and bats.
derived from plants.
• Aesthetic pleasures.
- 25,000 species of plants have
medicinal value.
C. ETHICAL ARGUMENTS
Biosphere Reserves: Areas of land or coastal ecosystems for conservation and sustainable use.
Sacred forests (Sacred groves): E.g.
India has 14 Biosphere Reserves, 90 National Parks and 448 wildlife sanctuaries.
Hotspots
The World Summit on Sustainable Development (Johannesburg, South Africa, 2002): (AIPMT 2008)
190 countries pledged to reduce the current rate of biodiversity loss.