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Biology
Module 4
Biodiversity
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Cards (35)
What is biodiversity?
The variety of living organisms.
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How can biodiversity be measured?
In terms of
species diversity
,
habitat diversity
, and
genetic diversity.
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What is species richness?
The
number
of
species
in an
area.
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What is species evenness?
Whether species have
similar numbers.
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What are the different types of sampling methods?
Random
: No particular system, aim is to be representative.
Opportunistic
: Those encountered first are chosen.
Stratified
: Population divided into smaller groups based on a characteristic, then sampled.
Systematic
: Follows a particular pattern.
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Why is sampling important in biodiversity studies?
It allows us to
investigate
the
population easily
since studying the whole
population
is
impractical.
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How is Simpson’s Index of Diversity used?
Measures the total number of organisms compared to the total number of organisms of each species.
A high index indicates several different species are equally abundant.
A low index indicates one or two species dominate over others.
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How can we assess genetic diversity?
By calculating the proportion of polymorphic gene loci as
number of polymorphic gene loci
total number of loci
\frac{\text{number of polymorphic gene loci}}{\text{total number of loci}}
total number of loci
number of polymorphic gene loci
.
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What are some factors that affect biodiversity?
Population growth
Deforestation for agriculture
Climate change affecting habitats
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What are reasons to maintain biodiversity?
Ecological: Protecting species, maintaining resources.
Economic: Reducing soil depletion.
Aesthetic: Protecting landscapes.
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What is the definition of conservation?
The protection and management of species and habitats to maintain biodiversity.
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What are examples of in-situ conservation?
Marine conservation zones
Wildlife reserves
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What are examples of ex-situ conservation?
Seed banks
Botanic gardens
Zoos
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What are some agreements made to protect species and habitats?
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species
(
CITES
)
Rio Convention on Biological Diversity
(
CBD
)
Countryside Stewardship Scheme
(
CSS
)
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What is the definition of classification?
The process of
naming
and
organising
organisms into
groups
based on their
characteristics.
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What are the eight groups in the classification hierarchy, from largest to smallest?
Domain
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
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What are the two components of a binomial name?
Generic
name and
specific
name.
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What does the generic name in a binomial name represent?
The genus the organism belongs to.
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What does the specific name in a binomial name represent?
The species the organism belongs to.
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What is the advantage of the binomial naming system?
It is universal
;
an organism’s binomial name is the same everywhere in the world.
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What are the five kingdoms and three domains?
Kingdoms:
Prokaryote
Protoctista
Fungi
Plantae
Animalia
Domains:
Bacteria
Archaea
Eukaryota
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How are organisms classified into a
kingdom
?
Based on similarities
in
observable characteristics.
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How was the domain system of classification developed?
By
analysing molecular differences
between
organisms
to
determine
their
evolutionary relationships.
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What is the difference between classification and phylogeny?
Classification is sorting
organisms
into
groups
, while phylogeny investigates
evolutionary relationships.
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Explain how natural selection results in evolution.
Random mutations
result in
new alleles.
Some alleles provide an
advantage
against
selection pressures.
Individuals with
advantageous alleles
are more likely to
survive
and
reproduce.
Their
offspring
inherit the
new allele
, leading to evolution of
new characteristics.
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How did Darwin and Wallace contribute to the theory of evolution?
They observed that
birds
with
beak shapes
suited to their
food
are more likely to
survive
and pass on those
traits.
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What are some pieces of evidence for the theory of evolution?
Fossils
allow comparison of
extinct
and
modern organisms.
Genomic DNA sequencing
shows
relationships
to
primates.
Molecular
evidence shows
proteins
are composed of the same
20 amino acids
in all
organisms.
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What causes variation in organisms?
Variation is caused by
genetic
factors like
mutations
and
environmental
factors like
climate
and
diet.
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What is the difference between intraspecific and interspecific variation?
Intraspecific variation is
within the same species
, while interspecific variation is
between different species.
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What is the difference between continuous and discontinuous variation?
Continuous
variation exists as
gradual
changes, while
discontinuous
variation exists as
distinct categories.
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Why might we calculate a Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient?
To measure
correlation
between
two variables
and how one variable
affects
the
other.
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How are Spearman’s rank results interpreted?
Closer to 1 indicates a
positive
correlation, closer to -1 indicates a
negative
correlation, and around 0 indicates
no correlation.
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What are three types of adaptation? Give examples of each.
Anatomical
:
changes to body structure
(e.g.,
oily fur
).
Physiological
:
changes to bodily processes
(e.g.,
venom production
).
Behavioural
:
changes to actions
(e.g.,
hibernation
).
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Why might organisms from different taxonomic groups show similar features?
Because they
adapted
to
similar environments
despite being from
different continents.
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What are some implications of evolution for humans?
Bacterial antibiotic resistance
makes
infections harder
to
treat.
Pesticide resistance
can lead to
crop destruction.
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