Ecosystem Diversity: the variety of ecosystems within a given region
Species Diversity: the variety of species within a given ecosystem
Genetic Diversity: the variety of genes within a given species
Genes form the blueprints for organism's traits. With genetic diversity, it helps
determine the species of diversity and ecosystem diversity
How many species?
the number of species in any place
is the measure of biodiversity
It is hard to determine how many species there actually are
because many organisms live in inaccessible locations
Scientists have estimated around 5 to
100 million species
Species Richness and Evenness
Species Richness: the number of species in a given
area
Species Evenness: whether a particular ecosystem is numerically dominated by one species or whether
all of its species have similar abundances
High species evenness means higher
levels of biodiversity while low species
evenness is the opposite
Species evennes and richness declines after
human disturbance
Evolutionary relationships
organizing species into categories of how
closely they are related
Phylogenies: the branching patterns of
evolutionary relationships
determined by the similarity of
their traits
Evolution is the mechanism
underlying biodiversity
Evolution: a change in the genetic
composition of a population over time
Microevolution: evolution below the species level (i.e.
different varieties of the same vegetables
Macroevolution: genetic changes that create new species, genera, families,
classes, or phyla-larger categories of organisms into which species are
organized
Genetic Diversity
Genes: physical locations on chromosomes
within each cell of an organism
Genotype: complete set of genes in an individual
Phenotype: The actual set of traits in an individuals anatomy,
physiology and behavior
Two processes of genetic diversity:
Mutation: occasional mistake in DNA copying
process that reduces a random change in genetic
code
Most are detrimental but some improve chances of
survival or reproduction
Recombination: as chromosomes are duplicated during reproductive cell division, a piece of a
chromosome breaks off and attaches to another chromosome, creating new combinations of
genes producing novel traits
This can help the immune systems defense
Evolution by Artificial Selection
Evolution by Artificial Selection: when humans determine which individuals breed,
typically with a certain set of traits
However it can produce unwanted results (i.e. weeds with mutations
repelling herbicides)
Evolution by Natural Selection
Evolution by Natural Selection: the environment determines
which species survive and reproduce
Fitness: an individuals ability to survive and reproduce
Adaptation: traits that
improve an individual's
fitness
Darwin's Theory
not all offspring
survive
individuals produce an
excess of offspring
individuals differ in
their traits
differences in traits can be
passed on from parents to
offspring
differences in traits are associated with
differences in the ability to survive and
reproduce
Evolution by Random Processes
Mutation: occur randomly; if not lethal, they can add
to genetic variation of a population
Genetic Drift: change in genetic
composition of a pop. over time as a result
of random mating
Bottleneck Effect: a reduction in the genetic
diversity of a pop. caused by a reduction in
its size
Founder Effect: a change in population
descended from a small number of colonizing
individuals
Allopatric versus Sympatric Speciation
Geographic Isolation: ex. of evolution creates
new species; when a subset of individuals from
a bigger pop. colonize in a new area that is
physically separated from the rest of the pop.
Reproductive Isolation: when two pop.s will
be separated over time and will become so
different that even if the physical barriers
were removed, they couldn't interbreed and
produce offspring