Biodiversity and Its Conservation
Biodiversity and Its Conservation
1. Biodiversity
➢ The occurrence of different types of genes, gene pools, species, habitats and ecosystems in a
particular place and various parts of earth is called biodiversity.
➢ The term ‘biodiversity’ was given by Edward Wilson.
➢ Biodiversity is divided into three levels of biological organisation:
(i) Genetic diversity
• It is the measure of variety in genetic information contained in the organisms
over its distributional range.
• It enables a population to adapt to its environment.
• For example, medicinal plant Rauwolfia vomitoria growing in Himalayan
ranges shows variation in potency and concentration of the active chemical
reserpine that it produces.
• There are more than 50,000 genetically different strains of rice and 1,000
varieties of mango in India.
(ii) Species diversity
• It is a measure of the variety of species and their relative abundance present
within a region.
• For example, the Western Ghats have a greater amphibian species diversity
than the Eastern Ghats.
(iii) Ecological diversity
• It is a measure of the diversity at community and ecosystem levels. They
represent the local, unique habitat and regional components of species
diversity.
• For example, ecological diversity is greater in India than a Scandavian
country like Norway due to presence of large number of ecosystems like
deserts, rainforests, coral reefs, wetlands, estuaries and alpine meadows.
3. Patterns of Biodiversity
➢ Biodiversity is not uniform throughout the world because it is affected by two factors—
latitudinal gradients and species–area relationship.
(i) Latitudinal gradients
• Biodiversity increases from poles to equators, i.e., from high to low latitude.
• Tropics (23.5°N to 23.5°S) have more species than temperate or polar
regions. For example, Columbia located near the ecuator has 1,400 species
of birds while New York (41.5°N) has 105 species and Greenland (71°N) has
only 56 species. India has more than 1200 species of birds. O Forest in
tropical region like Ecuador has up to 10 times as many species of vascular
plants as forest of equal area in temperate region like midwest of USA.
• Tropical rain forests of Amazon in South America possess the greatest
biodiversity on earth with more than 40,000 species of plants, 3,000 of
fishes, 1,300 of birds, 427 of mammals, 427 of amphibians, 378 of reptiles
and more than 1,25,000 of invertebrates.
• Greater biological diversity is observed in tropics because: (a) Temperate
regions have been subjected to frequent glaciations in the past but tropical
regions remained undisturbed. Therefore, tropics had a longer evolutionary
time for species diversification. (b) Temperate environment unlike the tropics
are more seasonal, less constant and unpredictable, resulting in less niche
specialisation and lesser species diversity. (c) Tropics have greater solar
energy exposure which contributes to higher productivity and greater
diversity.
(ii) Species–area relationship
• German naturalist and geographer Alexander von Humboldt observed that
within a region, species richness increased with increasing explored area but
up to a limit.
• The relationship between species richness and area for a wide variety of taxa
(like vascular plants, birds, bats and freshwater fishes) appears as a
rectangular hyperbola.
• On a logarithmic scale, the relationship is a straight line described by the
following equation:
log S = log C + Z log A
where,
S = Species richness
A = Area Z = Slope of the line
(regression coefficient)
C = Y-intercept.
• The value of Z lies in the range of
0.1–0.2 regardless of taxonomic
group or the region. Whether it is
plants in Britain, birds in California
or molluscs in New York State,
slopes of regression are similar.
• However, the analysis in a very large area like the whole continent gives a Z
value that ranges from 0.6 to 1.2. For example, for frugivorous (fruit eating)
birds and mammals in the tropical forest of different continents, the slope is
1.15.
5. Loss of Biodiversity
➢ It is caused by over-population, urbanisation and industrialisation.
➢ The colonisation of tropical Pacific Islands by humans has led to the extinction of more than
2,000 species of native birds.
➢ 15,500 species are facing the threat of extinction worldwide.
➢ IUCN Red list (2004) documents extinction of 784 species including 338 vertebrates, 359
invertebrates and 487 plants in last 500 years.
➢ At present, 31 per cent of gymnosperms, 32 per cent of amphibians, 12 per cent of bird
species and 23 per cent of mammals face the threat of extinction.
➢ Some recently extinct species are dodo (Mauritius), quagga (Africa), thylacine (Australia),
Stellar’s sea cow (Russia) and three tiger species (Bali, Java, Caspian).
➢ In last 20 years, 27 species have disappeared.
➢ There has been five episodes of mass extinction of species and the sixth extinction is going
on, but it is 100–1000 times faster than the earlier ones.
➢ Loss of biodiversity in a region may lead to
(i) decrease in plant production.
(ii) less resistance to environmental disturbances such as drought.
(iii) increased variability in ecosystem processes like plant productivity, water use, pest
and disease cycles.
8. Conservation of Biodiversity
➢ Biodiversity can be conserved by protecting its whole ecosystem.
➢ There are two basic approaches for conservation of biodiversity.
(i) In situ conservation (On site conservation)
• This approach involves placing threatened animals and plants in special care units for
their protection.
• India has 35 botanical gardens and 275 zoological parks where animals which have
become extinct in wild are maintained.
• By using cryopreservation (preservation at –196°C) technique, sperms, eggs, animal
cells, tissues and embryos can be stored for long period in genes banks, seed banks,
etc.
• Plants are propagated in vitro using tissue culture methods (micropropagation).
• It is the desirable approach when urgent measures to save extinction are required.
9. Conventions on Biodiversity
➢ The Earth Summit was held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, which called upon all nations to take
appropriate measures for conservation of biodiversity and sustainable utilisation of its
benefits.
➢ The World Summit on Sustainable Development was held in Johannesburg, South Africa in
2002 in which 190 countries pledged to reduce the current rate of biodiversity loss at global,
regional and local levels by 2010.