4.2.1 biodiversity Flashcards
What levels can biodiversity be studied at?
Habitat biodiversity.
Species biodiversity.
Genetic biodiversity.
What is habitat biodiversity?
Habitat biodiversity refers to the number of different habitats found within an area.
e.g. meadow, woodland, streams, and sand dunes.
What is species evenness?
A comparison of the numbers of individuals of each species living in a community.
What is species richness?
The number of different species living in a particular area.
What components make up species biodiversity?
Species richness and species evenness make up species biodiversity.
What is genetic biodiversity?
Genetic biodiversity refers to the variety of genes that make up a species.
What does greater genetic biodiversity within a species lead to?
Greater genetic biodiversity within a species allows for better adaptation to a changing environment, and is more likely to result in individuals who are resistant to disease.
Leads to quite different characteristics being exhibited-different breeds within a species.
What is an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)?
EIAs attempt to predict the positive and negative effects of a project on the biodiversity in that area.
What is sampling?
Sampling is taking measurements of a limited number of individual organisms present in a particular area.
What is the abundance of organisms?
The number of individuals of a species present in an area.
What is random sampling?
Random sampling means selecting individuals by chance.
Each individual in the population has an equal likelihood of selection.
What is non-random sampling?
Non-random sampling is an alternative sampling method where the sample is not chosen at random.
What is opportunistic non-random sampling?
This is the weakest form of sampling as it may not be representative of the population.
Opportunistic sampling uses organisms that are conveniently available.
What is stratified non-random sampling?
Some populations can be divided into a number of strata (sub-groups) based on a particular characteristic.
For instance, the population might be separated into males and females.
A random sample is then taken from each of these strata proportional to its size.
What is systematic non-sampling?
In systematic sampling different areas within an overall habitat are identified, which are then sampled separately.
Systematic sampling is often carried out using a line or a belt transect.
What does a belt transect provide?
A belt transect provides more information: two parallel lines are marked, and samples are taken of the area between the two lines.
What does a line transect involve?
A line transect involves marking a line along the ground between two poles and taking samples at specified points.
What is sampling bias?
The selection process may be biased.
The effects of sampling bias can be reduced using random sampling, where human involvement is removed.
How can chance reduce reliability in entire representation of organisms in a habitat?
The organisms selected may by chance, not be representative of the whole population.
Chance can never be removed from the process, but its effect can be minimised by using a large sample size.
How can animals be sampled?
A pooter.
A sweepnet.
A pitfall trap.
Tree beating.
Kick sampling.
What is a pooter?
A pooter is used to catch small insects.
When is a sweep net used?
Sweep nets are used to catch insects in areas of long grass.
How is a pitfall trap used?
Pitfall traps are used to catch small, crawling invertebrates such as beetles, spiders and slugs.
A hole is dug in the ground, which insects fall into.