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Selection and Evolution
Natural Selection
Variation is vital because it helps populations to survive unfavourable conditions, and in practice conditions are nearly always unfavourable. There is competition for resources; food, light, water, nutrients etc. In addition organisms have to survive draught, cold, heat, disease and a variety of other challenges.
Natural selection is a process in which those organisms whose genes give them a selective advantage are more likely to survive, reproduce and pass their genes onto the next generation.
Natural selection is often called survival of the fittest, but in a biological context fitness means reproductive success. Fit organisms will pass more of their genes on to the next generation than less fit ones.
A good example of natural selection is that of antibiotic resistance in bacteria. What the media call ‘superbugs’ are bacterial infections that resist treatment with antibiotics. Some strains of bacteria are resistant to virtually all of the antibiotics at our disposal and they represent a growing threat. Initially, the resistance probably arose as a result of a mutation. A single gene in a bacterium mutated so that it produced a protein that in some way made the bacterium resistant to the antibiotic.
It is important to appreciate that the antibiotic did not cause the mutation. However the mutation already existed in the population, or occurred in the right place at the right time, so it gave the individual a selective advantage. In areas of antibiotic use, the resistant bacteria multiplied while the susceptible ones were killed. In this way the frequency of the resistance allele would increase.
Speciation
Defining a species is difficult because new species evolve out of existing ones and the process is gradual. However, for exam purposes a working definition of a species is…
A population or group of populations of similar individuals that can mate and produce fertile offspring.
The classic example of this concept is the horse and the donkey. A male horse can mate with a female donkey to produce a mule. This hybrid, however, is sterile and so the horse and the donkey are regarded as separate species
Note: - Domestic dogs come in all shapes and sizes, but a Jack Russell and a poodle can mate to produce perfectly fertile crossbreeds. We say that the poodle and the Jack Russell are different breeds, not different species.
The Evolution of new species: -
There are three key steps to the evolution of a new species...
1. Isolation: Part of a population becomes isolated so that it cannot breed with the rest of the population.
2. Natural selection: Natural selection acts in different ways according to the local situation so that the frequency of phenotypes and alleles changes
3. Speciation: Over the generations genetic differences accumulate so that the different populations can’t interbreed even if brought together again.
Classification
There are over two million known species of organism, and a large but unknown number yet to be classified. The science of classification is known as taxonomy, and it aims to produce a catalogue of living things on Earth.
All species are given a scientific name, which usually comes from Latin or Greek. This name is used across all language barriers, and avoids confusion when referring to a particular species
Scientific names are binomial – they have two parts. The first part, the generic name, is the name of the genus and has a CAPITAL LETTER. The specific name follows, and does not have a capital letter e.g. Canis familiaris – the domestic dog, or Gorilla gorilla – the gorilla.
Scientific names should be given in italics or underlined.
This system of classification is called phylogenetic – based on evolutionary history, like a family tree over millions of years. To construct a phylogenetic tree, scientists use anatomical/physical features, fossil records and biochemical analysis of DNA and proteins.
A Level Biology - Classification of Organisms: Phylogeny
A Level Biology - Classification of Organisms: Taxonomy
The taxonomic hierarchy is shown below.
The key features are:
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It consists of a series of groups within groups, from the most general (kingdom) to the most specific (species)
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There is no overlap between the groups. For instance, there is no organism that is part amphibian and part reptile – its either in one group of the other.
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The groups are based on shared features. The more specific the group, the more shared features there are
The five kingdoms
Scientists have recently accepted the five kingdom system of classification. All organisms can be placed into one of these five kingdoms. Four kingdoms contain the eukaryotic organisms while a fifth contains the prokaryotes – the bacteria.
The essential features each of the five kingdoms are: -
1 Kingdom Animalia (the animals)
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Includes all the vertebrates (mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish) and invertebrates (inc. insects and other arthropods, molluscs, segmented worms, roundworms, tapeworms/flukes and jellyfish)
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Animals are eukaryotic and multicellular. Their cells have no walls
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They cannot make food, so move in search of it. They have muscles and nervous systems.
2 Kingdom Plantae (Plants)
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Includes flowering plants, conifers and ferns along with simpler plants such as mosses, liverworts. NB Not the algae/seaweeds
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Eukaryotic and multicellular. Cells have walls made from cellulose. Usually a large vacuole in mature cells
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Most plants have leaves, stems and roots
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Most plants possess chlorophyll and make food by photosynthesis. A few are modified to a parasitic way of life.
3 Kingdom Fungi
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Includes filamentous fungi and yeasts
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Single celled fungi are called yeasts
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Eukaryotic, but the multicellular fungi do not have separate cells – the nuclei are dotted around in the tissue.
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Walls of fungal cells contain chitin
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All fungi feed by extracellular digestion – secreting enzymes and absorbing the soluble products. Most feed on dead material, i.e. are saprophytes. Some are parasitic
4 Kingdom Protoctista
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The members of this kingdom seem to have very little in common, more like an assembly of organisms that could be put into any other kingdom – a taxonomic dustbin. There is a sound scientific reason for this group, however, but I’ve forgotten it. Something to do with embryological development, or the price of cheese. You don’t need it.
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Includes single cells protozoans such as amoeba and plasmodium (the malaria parasite, the algae (including seaweeds) and sponges.
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Their cells are eukaryotic, but show a diversity of cell types
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They feed in a variety of ways.
5 Kingdom Prokaryotae
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Includes the bacteria and
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Single celled, prokaryotic organisms. Cells much smaller than eukaryotic ones.
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Most feed by extracellular digestion – secreting enzymes and absorbing the soluble products. Most feed on dead material, i.e. are saprophytes. Some are parasitic and some - the cyanobacteria – are photosynthetic.
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Reproduce mainly by binary fission (splitting in half), but can reproduce sexually.
Variation
Types of variation
There are two basic types of variation; continuous and discontinuous.
Discontinuous variation refers to features that fall into one category or another. The human ABO blood group system is a classic example; individuals are either A, A AB or O – there is nothing in-between. Discontinuous features are usually controlled by single alleles, which the individual either has or it doesn’t. Monohybrid and dihybrid inheritance are concerned with features that show discontinuous variation.
Continuous variation refers to features that show a whole range of values. In humans most variation is continuous; height, shoe size, intelligence. For any discontinuous factor there is a range of factors and, usually, most individuals fall into the mid range, giving a normal distribution. Continuous variation is usually controlled by several genes – it is said to be polygenic.
Causes of variation: the causes of genetic variation can be summed up as...
1 Crossover in meiosis
2 Independent assortment in meiosis
3 Random fertilisation of gametes – in animals, all sperm and ova are genetically unique, and which sperm fertilises the egg is totally random.
4 Mutation. Gene mutations are changes in the base sequence of the DNA so that the amino acid sequence changes and a different protein is made (see AS module 2). This is usually harmful or irrelevant, but occasionally beneficial. Such beneficial mutations will give the individual a selective advantage – this is the driving force behind evolution.
Twin Studies
When studying variation is difficult to determine the relative importance of genes and environment. In humans, a lot of work has been done on identical and non identical twins, and this is a popular exam topic. The key points are: -
1 Identical - or monozygotic – twins have exactly the same genotype so any differences between them must be due to environment i.e. their upbringing. Identical twins reared apart are especially interesting to geneticists.
2 Non-identical - or dizygotic - twins reared together have different genes but largely the same environment (though it can never be exactly the same). Any differences in these twins are largely genetic.
3 It is difficult to draw valid conclusions from twin studies in humans because there are so few subjects to study.
A Level Biology - Ecology
What is Ecology?
Ecology is the study of living organisms and their environment. The aim of ecological study is to explain why organisms live and interact the where they do. To do this ecologists study ecosystems - areas that can vary in size from a small pond to the whole planet.
Some key definitions: -
Abiotic: Any non-living or physical factor.
Biotic: Any living or biological factor.
Community: The living or biotic part of an ecosystem, i.e. all the organisms of all the different species living in one habitat.
Ecosystem: A reasonably self-contained area together with all its living organisms.
Habitat: The physical or abiotic part of an ecosystem, i.e. a defined area with specific characteristics where the organisms live, e.g. oak forest, deep sea, sand dune, rocky shore, moorland, hedgerow, garden pond, etc.
Population: The members of the same species living in one habitat.
Species: A group of organisms that can successfully interbreed
Energy and Matter
Before getting into the study of ecosystems, it is important to appreciate the difference between energy and matter.
Energy and matter are quite different things and cannot be inter-converted.
What is Energy?
Energy comes in many different forms, for example: heat, light, chemical, potential, kinetic, etc., which can be inter-converted, but energy can never be created, destroyed or used up.
If we talk about energy being “lost”, we usually mean as heat, which is radiated out into space.
Energy is constantly arriving on earth from the sun, and is constantly leaving the earth as heat, but the total amount of energy on the earth is constant.
What is Matter?
Matter comes in three states (solid, liquid and gas) and again, cannot be created or destroyed. The total amount of matter on the Earth is constant. Matter (and especially the biochemicals found in living organisms) can contain stored chemical energy, so a cow contains biomass (matter) as well as chemical energy stored in its biomass.
Energy is constantly arriving from the sun, passing through living organisms, and leaving the Earth as heat.
Matter cycles between living and non-living things. But no new matter reaches the Earth, and none leaves.
Food Chains and Food Webs
The many relationships between the members of a community in an ecosystem can be described by food chains and food webs. Each stage in a food chain is called a trophic level, and the arrows represent the flow of energy and matter through the food chain. Food chains always start with photosynthetic producers (plants, algae, plankton and photosynthetic bacteria) because, uniquely, producers are able to extract both energy and matter from the abiotic environment (energy from the sun, and 98% of their matter from carbon dioxide in the air, with the remaining 2% from water and minerals in soil).
All other living organisms get both their energy and matter by eating other organisms.
Although this represents a “typical” food chain, with producers being eaten by animal consumers, different organisms use a large range of feeding strategies (other than consuming), leading to a range of different types of food chain. Some of these strategies are defined below, together with other terms associated with food chains.
Producer: - An organism that produces food from carbon dioxide and water using photosynthesis. Can be plant, algae, plankton or bacteria.
Consumer: - An animal that eats other organisms
Herbivore: - A consumer that eats plants (= primary consumer).
Carnivore: - A consumer that eats other animals (= secondary consumer).
Top Carnivore: - A consumer at the top of a food chain with no predators.
Omnivore: - A consumer that eats plants or animals.
Vegetarian: - A human that chooses not to eat animals (humans are omnivores)
Autotroph: - An organism that manufactures its own food (= producer)
Heterotroph: - An organism that obtains its energy and mass from other organisms (=consumers + decomposers)
Plankton: - Microscopic marine organisms.
Phytoplankton: - “Plant plankton” i.e. microscopic marine producers.
Zooplankton: - “Animal plankton” i.e. microscopic marine consumers.
Predator: - An animal that hunts and kills animals for food.
Prey: - An animal that is hunted and killed for food.
Scavenger: - An animal that eats dead animals, but doesn't kill them
Symbiosis: - Organisms living together in a close relationship (= parasitism, mutualism, pathogen).
Mutualism: - Two organisms living together for mutual benefit.
Commensalism: - Relationship in which only one organism benefits
Parasite: - An organism that feeds on a larger living host organism, harming it
Pathogen: - A microbe that causes a disease.
So, be aware that food chains don’t need to end with a consumer, nor do they need to even start with a producer! for example: -
Ecological Pyramids
In general as you go up a food chain the size of the individuals increases and the number of individuals decreases. These sorts of observations can be displayed in ecological pyramids, which are used to quantify food chains. There are three kinds: -
1. Pyramids of Numbers.
These show the numbers of organisms at each trophic level in a food chain. The width of the bars represent the numbers using a linear or logarithmic scale, or the bars may be purely qualitative. The numbers should be normalised for a given area for a terrestrial habitat (usually Meter squared), or volume for a marine habitat (Meter cubed).
Pyramids of numbers are most often triangular (or pyramid) shaped, but can be almost any shape. In the pyramids below: -
(A) shows a typical pyramid of numbers for carnivores.
(B) shows a typical parasite food chain.
(C) shows the effect of a single large producer such as a tree.
2. Pyramids of Biomass
These convey more information, since they consider the total mass of living organisms (i.e. the biomass) at each trophic level. The biomass should be dry mass (since water stores no energy) and is measured in kg m-2. The biomass may be found by drying and weighing the organisms at each trophic level, or by counting them and multiplying by an average individual mass. Pyramids of biomass are always pyramid shaped, since if a trophic level gains all its mass from the level below, then it cannot have more mass than that level (you cannot weigh more than you eat). The “missing" mass, which is not eaten by consumers, becomes detritus and is decomposed.
3. Pyramids of Energy
Food chains represent flows of matter and energy, so two different pyramids are needed to
quantify each flow. Pyramids of energy show how much energy flows into each trophic level in
a given time, so the units are usually something like kJ m-2 y-1. Pyramids of energy are always
pyramidal (energy cannot be created), and always very shallow, since the transfer of energy
from one trophic level to the next is very inefficient The “missing” energy, which is not passed
on to the next level, is lost eventually as heat.
[insert pyramid of energy images]
Energy Flow in Ecosystems
Three things can happen to the energy taken in by the organisms in a trophic level: -
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It can be passed on to the biomass of the next trophic level in the food chain when the organism is eaten.
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It can become stored in detritus. This energy is passed on to decomposers when the detritus decays.
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It can be converted to heat energy by inefficient chemical reactions, radiated by warm bodies, or in friction due to movement. The heat energy is lost to the surroundings, and cannot be regained by living organisms.
These three fates are shown in this energy flow diagram: -
[insert flow energy flow, flow diagram]
Eventually all the energy that enters the ecosystem will be converted to heat, which is lost to space.
Material Cycles in Ecosystems
Matter cycles between the biotic environment and in the abiotic environment. Simple inorganic molecules (such as CO2, N2 and H2O) are assimilated (or fixed) from the abiotic environment by producers and microbes, and built into complex organic molecules (such as carbohydrates, proteins and lipids). These organic molecules are passed through food chains and eventually returned to the abiotic environment again as simple inorganic molecules by decomposers. Without either producers or decomposers there would be no nutrient cycling and no life.
[insert simple material cycle image]
The simple inorganic molecules are often referred to as nutrients.
Nutrients can be grouped as: -
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Major nutrients (molecules containing the elements C, H and O, comprising >99% of biomass)
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Macronutrients (molecules containing elements such as N, S, P, K, Ca and Mg, comprising 0.5% of biomass)
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Micronutrients or trace elements (0.1% of biomass).
Macronutrients and micronutrients are collectively called minerals.
While the major nutrients are obviously needed in the largest amounts, the growth of producers is usually limited by the availability of minerals such as nitrate and phosphate.
There are two groups of decomposers: -
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Detrivores are animals that eat detritus (such as earthworms and woodlice). They digest much of the material, but like all animals are unable to digest the cellulose and lignin in plant cell walls. They break such plant tissue into much smaller pieces with a larger surface area making it more accessible to the saprophytes. They also assist saprophytes by excreting useful minerals such as urea, and by aerating the soil.
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Saprophytes (or decomposers) are microbes (fungi and bacteria) that live on detritus. They digest it by extracellular digestion, and then absorb the soluble nutrients. Given time, they can completely break down any organic matter (including cellulose and lignin) to inorganic matter such as carbon dioxide, water and mineral ions.
Detailed material cycles can be constructed for elements such as carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sulphur, phosphorus, or for compounds such as water, but they all have the same basic pattern as the simple image shown above.
Let's take a look at the carbon cycle and nitrogen cycles in detail.
The Carbon Cycle
[insert carbon cycle flow diagram]
The carbon cycle flow diagram (above) shows that there are really many carbon cycles, with time scales ranging from minutes to millions of years.
it’s import to know that microorganisms have a major role at all stages.
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Far more carbon is fixed by microscopic marine producers (algae & phytoplankton) from CO2 dissolved in the oceans than by terrestrial plants from CO2 in the air.
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During the Earth's early history (3000 MY ago) photosynthetic bacteria called cyanobacteria changed the composition of the Earth's atmosphere by fixing most of the CO2 and replacing it with oxygen. This allowed the first heterotrophic cells to use oxygen in respiration.
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A large amount of the fixed carbon is used by marine zooplankton to make calcium carbonate shells. These are not eaten by consumers and cannot easily be decomposed, so turn into carboniferous rocks (chalk, limestone, coral, etc). 99% of the Earth's carbon is in this form.
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The decomposers are almost all microbes such as fungi and bacteria. Most of the detritus is in the form of cellulose and other plant fibres, which eukaryotes cannot digest. Only a few bacteria posses the cellulase enzymes required to break down plant fibres. Herbivorous animals such as cows and termites depend on these bacteria in their guts.
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Much of the CO2 that was fixed by ferns during the carboniferous era (300 MY ago) was sedimented and turned into fossil fuels. The recent mining and burning of fossil fuels has significantly altered the carbon cycle by releasing the carbon again, causing a 15% increase inCO2 in just 200 years.
The Nitrogen Cycle
Note! “Nitrogen" can confusingly mean nitrogen atoms (N) nitrogen molecules (N2), i.e. proteins contain nitrogen atoms but not nitrogen molecules.
[insert image of nitrogen cycle]
Microbes are involved at most stages of the nitrogen cycle!
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Nitrogen Fixation. 78% of the atmosphere is nitrogen gas (N2), but this is inert and can’t be used by plants or animals. Nitrogen fixing bacteria reduce nitrogen gas to ammonia (N2 + 6H —> 2NH3), which dissolves to form ammonium ions. This process uses the enzyme nitrogenase and ATP as a source of energy. The nitrogen-fixing bacteria may be free-living in soil or water, or they may live in colonies inside the cells of root nodules of leguminous plants such as clover or peas.
This is an example of mutualism as the plants gain a source of useful nitrogen from the bacteria, while the bacteria gain carbohydrates and protection from the plants.
Nitrogen gas can also be fixed to ammonia by humans using the Haber process, and a small amount of nitrogen is fixed to nitrate by lightning.
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Nitrification. Nitrifying bacteria can oxidise ammonia to nitrate in two stages: first forming nitrite ions then forming nitrate ions These are chemosynthetic bacteria, which means they use the energy released by nitrification to live, instead of using respiration. Plants can only take up nitrogen in the form of nitrate.
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Denitrification. The anaerobic denitrifying bacteria convert nitrate to N2 and NOx, which is then lost to the air. This represents a constant loss of “useful” nitrogen from soil, and explains why nitrogen fixation by the nitrifying bacteria and fertilisers are so important.
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Ammonification. Microbial saprophytes break down proteins in detritus to form ammonia in two stages: first they digest proteins to amino acids using extracellular protease enzymes, then they remove the amino groups from amino acids using deaminase enzymes.
Population Ecology
Population Ecology in concerned with the question: why is a population the size it is? This means understanding the various factors that affect the population.
Population Growth
When a species is introduced into a new environment its population grows in a characteristic way. This growth curve is often seen experimentally, for example bees in a hive, sheep in Tasmania, bacteria in culture. The curve is called a logistic or sigmoid growth curve.
[insert diagram of growth curve]
The growth curve has three phases, with different factors being responsible for the shape of each phase. The actual factors depend on the ecosystem, and this can be illustrated by considering two contrasting examples: yeast in a flask (reproducing asexually), and rabbits in a field (reproducing sexually).
[insert table comparing population growth]
At the end of phase 3 the population is stable. This population is called the carrying capacity of the environment (K), and is the maximum population supported by a particular ecosystem.
Factors Affecting Population Size
Many different factors interact to determine population size, and it can be very difficult to determine which factors are the most important. Factors can be split into two broad group: abiotic factors and biotic factors.
You'll need to now about 7 different factors.
1. Abiotic Factors
The population is obviously affected by the abiotic environment such as: temperature; water humidity; pH; light/shade; soil (edaphic factors); mineral supply; current (wind/water); topography (altitude, slope, aspect); catastrophes (floods/fire/frost); pollution. Successful species are generally well adapted to their abiotic environment. In harsh environments (very cold, very hot, very dry, very acid, etc.) only a few species will have successfully adapted to the conditions so they will not have much competition from other species, but in mild environments lots of different species could live there, so there will be competition. In other words in harsh environments abiotic factors govern who survives, while in mild environments biotic factors (such as competition) govern who survives.
2. Seasons
Many abiotic factors vary with the seasons, and this can cause a periodic oscillation in the population size.
[insert diagram explaining population cycles through the seasons]
This is only seen in species with a short life cycle compared to the seasons, such as insects. Species with long life cycles (longer than a year) do not change with the seasons like this.
3. Food Supply
A population obviously depends on the population of its food supply: if there is plenty of food the population increases and vice versa. For example red deer introduced to an Alaskan island at first showed a population increase, but this large population grazed the vegetation too quickly for the slow growth to recover, so the food supply dwindled and the deer population crashed.
[insert diagram/graph]
4. Interspecific Competition
Interspecific competition is competition for resources (such as food, space, water, light, etc.) between members of different species, and in general one species will out-compete another one. This can be demonstrated by growing two different species of the protozoan Paramecium in flasks in a lab. They both grow well in lab flasks when grown separately, but when grown together P. aurelia out-competes P. caudatum for food, so the population of P. caudatum falls due to interspecific competition.
[insert graphs showing interspecific competition]
5. Intraspecific Competition
Intraspecific competition is competition for resources between members of the same species. This is more significant than interspecific competition, since member of the same species have the same niche and so compete for exactly the same resources. Intraspecific competition tends to have a stabilising influence on population size. If the population gets too big, intraspecific population increases, so the population falls again. If the population gets too small, intraspecific population decreases, so the population increases again.
[insert graphs showing intraspecific competition]
Intraspecific competition is also the driving force behind natural selection, since the individuals with the “best” genes are more likely to win the competition and pass on their genes. Some species use aggressive behaviour to minimise real competition. Ritual fights, displays, threat postures are used to allow some individuals (the “best”) to reproduce and exclude others (the “weakest”). This avoids real fights or shortages, and results in an optimum size for a population.
6. Predation
The populations of predators and their prey depend on each other, so they tend to show cyclical changes. This has been famously measured for populations of lynx (predator) and hare (prey) in Canada, and can also be demonstrated in a lab experiment using two species of mite: Eotetranchus (a herbivore) and Typhlodromus (a predator). If the population of the prey increases, the predator will have more food, so its population will start to increase. This means that more prey will be
eaten, so its population will decrease, so causing a cycle in both populations.
[insert graphs showing predator prey relationship]
7. Parasitism and Disease
Parasites and their hosts have a close symbiotic relationship, so their populations also oscillate. This is demonstrated by winter moth caterpillars (the host species) and wasp larvae (parasites on the caterpillars). If the population of parasite increases, they kill their hosts, so their population decreases. This means there are fewer hosts for the parasite, so their population decreases. This allows the host population to recover, so the parasite population also recovers.
[insert graphs showing parasitism & disease]
The Ecological Niche
A population’s niche refers to its role in its ecosystem.
This typically means its feeding role in the food chain, so a particular population’s niche could be a producer, a predator, a parasite, a leafeater, etc.
A more detailed description of a niche should really include many different aspects such as its food, its habitat, its reproduction method etc, e.g...
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Gerbils are desert seed-eating mammals
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Seaweed is an inter-tidal autotroph
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Fungi are asexual soil-living saprophytes.
Identifying the different niches in an ecosystem helps us to understand the interactions between populations.
Members of the same population always have the same niche, and will be well-adapted to that niche, e.g. nectar feeding birds have long thin beaks.
[insert image]
Species with narrow niches are called specialists (e.g. anteater). Many different specialists can coexist in the same habitat because they are not competing, so this can lead to high diversity, for example warblers in a coniferous forest feed on insects found at different heights. Specialists rely on a constant supply of their food, so are generally found in abundant, stable habitats such as the tropics.
Species with broad niches are called generalists (e.g. common crow). Generalists in the same habitat will compete, so there can only be a few, so this can lead to low diversity. Generalists can cope with a changing food supply (such as seasonal changes) since they can switch from one food to another or even one habitat to another (for example by migrating).
The niche concept was investigated in the 1930s by Georgy Gause. caring out a series of now classic experiments Gause used flasks of different species of the protozoan Paramecium, which eat bacteria.
[insert images showing experiment 1]. Conclusion: These two species of Paramecium share the same niche, so they compete. P. aurelia is faster-growing, so it out-competes P. caudatum.
[insert images showing experiment 2]. Conclusion: These two species of Paramecium have slightly different niches, so they don’t compete and can coexist.
It is important to understand the distribution in experiment 2:
P. caudatum lives in the upper part of the flask because only it is adapted to that niche and it has no competition. In the lower part of the flask both species could survive, but only P. bursaria is found because it out-competes P. caudatum. If P. caudatum was faster-growing it would be found throughout the flask.
The niche concept is summarised in the competitive exclusion principle:
“Two species cannot coexist in the same habitat if they have the same niche”.
Ecological Succession
Ecosystems are not “fixed”, rather they are constantly change over time.
This change over the is known as [ecological] succession.
Imagine a lifeless area of bare rock. What will happen to it as time passes?
[insert image showing succession]
1. Very few species can live on bare rock since it stores little water and has few available nutrients. The first colonisers are usually lichens, which are a mutualistic relationship between an alga and a fungus. The alga photosynthesises and makes organic compounds, while the fungus absorbs water and minerals and clings to the rock. Lichens are such good colonisers that almost all “bare rock” is actually covered in a thin layer of lichen. Mosses can grow on top of the lichens. Between then these colonisers start to erode the rock and so form a thin soil. Colonisers are slow growing and tolerant of extreme conditions.
2. Pioneer species such as grasses and ferns grow in the thin soil and their roots accelerate soil formation. They have a larger photosynthetic area, so they grow faster, so they make more detritus, so they form better soil, which holds more water.
3. Herbaceous Plants such as dandelion, goosegrass (“weeds”) have small wind-dispersed seeds and rapid growth, so they become established before larger plants.
4. Larger plants (shrubs) such as bramble, gorse, hawthorn, broom and rhododendron can now grow in the good soil. These grow faster and so out-compete the slower-growing pioneers.
5. Trees grow slowly, but eventually shade and out-compete the shrubs, which are replaced by shade-tolerant forest-floor species. A complex food web is now established with many trophic levels and interactions. This is called the climax community.
These stages are called seral stages, or seral communities, and the whole succession is called a sere.
Each organism modifies the environment, so creating opportunities for other species. As the succession proceeds the community becomes more diverse, with more complex food webs being supported. The final seral stage is stable (assuming the environment doesn’t change), so succession stops at the climax stage. In England the natural climax community is oak or beech woodland (depending on the underlying rock), and in the highlands of Scotland it is pine forests.
In Roman times the country was covered in oak and beech woodlands with herbivores such as deer, omnivores such as bear and carnivores such as wolves and lynxes. It was said that a squirrel could travel from coast to coast without touching ground.
Humans interfere with succession, and have done so since Neolithic times, so in the UK there are few examples of a natural climax left (except perhaps small areas of the Caledonian pine forest in the Scottish Highlands). Common landscapes today like farmland, grassland, moorland and gardens are all maintained at pre-climax stages by constant human interventions, including ploughing, weeding, herbicides, burning, crop planting and grazing animals.
These are examples of an artificial climax, or plagioclimax.
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Primary succession starts with bare rock or sand, such as behind a retreating glacier, after a volcanic eruption, following the silting of a shallow lake or seashore, on a new sand dune, or on rock scree from erosion and weathering of a mountain.
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Secondary succession starts with soil, but no (or only a few) species, such as in a forest clearing, following a forest fire, or when soil is deposited by a meandering river.
Ecological Impact of Farming (agriculture).
One of the main reasons for studying ecology is to understand the impact humans are having on the planet. The huge increases in human population over the last few hundred years has been possible due to the development of intensive farming, including monoculture, selective breeding, huge farms, mechanisation and the use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides. However, it is apparent that this intensive farming is damaging the environment and is becoming increasingly difficult to
sustain. Many farmers are now turning to environmentally-friendly organic farming.
You'll need to learn these 5 of the main issues and possible solutions.
1. Monoculture
Until the middle of the 20th century, farms were usually small and mixed (i.e. they grew a variety of crops and kept animals). About a third of the population worked on farms. The British countryside was described by one observer in 1943 as
“an attractive patchwork with an infinite variety of small odd-shaped fields bounded by twisting hedges, narrow winding lanes and small woodlands”.
Today that picture is quite different, with large uninterrupted areas of one colour due to specialisation in one crop - monoculture. Monoculture increases the productivity of farmland by growing only the best variety of crop; allowing more than one crop per year; simplifying sowing and harvesting of the crop; and reducing labour costs.
Monoculture has a major impact on the environment:
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Using a single variety of crop reduces genetic diversity and renders all crops in a region susceptible to disease.
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Fertilisers are required to maintain soil fertility. This is expensive and can pollute surrounding groundwater due to leaching.
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Pesticides are required to keep crops healthy. Again this is expensive and potentially polluting
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Monoculture reduces species diversity. This has many knock-on effects such as allowing a pest species to get out of control, fewer plants due to lack of pollinating insects and loss of species that may be useful to humans
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Less attractive countryside. Many farmers are now returning to traditional crop rotations, where different crops are grown in a field each year. This breaks the life cycles of pests (since their host is changing); improves soil texture (since different crops have different root structures and methods of cultivation); and can increase soil nitrogen (by planting nitrogen-fixing legumes).
2. Hedgerows
Hedges have been planted since Anglo-Saxon times to mark field boundaries and to contain livestock. As they have matured they have diversified to contain a large number of different plant and animal species, some found nowhere else in the UK. Since the second world war much of the hedgerow has been removed because:
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As mixed farms converted to arable farms, hedgerows are no longer needed to contain livestock.
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Many small farms have been amalgamated into large farms, allowing larger fields, which in turn allows greater mechanisation and lower labour costs. One farmer reported that "by removing 1.5 miles of hedges, resulted in an increase of arable land by 3 acres and reduced harvesting time by one third".
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Hedgerows reduce the space available for planting crops, and their roots compete with those of crops for water and minerals in the soil.
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Hedgerows provide shelter for pests such as rabbits and insects, and they are a reservoir of weeds and disease.
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Hedgerows need to be maintained, which is a skilled job, costing time and money. However it has now become clear that hedgerows served an important place in the ecology of Britain.
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They provide habitats for at least 30 species of trees and shrubs, 65 species of nesting birds, 1500 species of insects and 600 species of wildflowers. These in turn provide food for small mammals.
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They act as corridors, allowing animals to move safely between woodlands.
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Some of the animals they shelter are predators of plant pests, so they may reduce pests, not increase them
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They are efficient windbreaks, providing shelter for animals and plants, and reducing soil erosion.
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During storms in recent years large amounts of topsoil was blown away from large unsheltered fields.
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They provide habitats for pollinating insects, so removing hedgerows can indirectly reduce the populations of other local plant species.
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In the UK we have surpluses of many crops, and farmers can receive grants to reduce their food production.
The importance of hedgerows is now widely recognised, and farmers can receive grants to plant hedgerows. However it takes hundreds of years for new hedgerows to mature and develop the same diversity as the old ones.
3. Fertilisers
Since the rate of plant growth in usually limited by the availability of mineral ions in the soil, then adding more of these ions as fertiliser is a simple way to improve yields, and this is a keystone of intensive farming. The most commonly used fertilisers are the soluble inorganic fertilisers containing nitrate, phosphate and potassium ions (NPK).
Inorganic fertilisers are very effective but also have undesirable effects on the environment. Since nitrate and ammonium ions are very soluble, they do not remain in the soil for long and are quickly leached out, ending up in local
rivers and lakes and causing eutrophication. They are also expensive.
An alternative solution, which does less harm to the environment, is the use of organic fertilisers, such as animal manure (farmyard manure or FYM), composted vegetable matter, crop residues, and sewage sludge. These contain the main elements found in inorganic fertilisers (NPK), but in organic compounds such as urea, cellulose, lipids and organic acids.
Of course plants cannot make use of these organic materials in the soil: their roots can only take up inorganic mineral ions such as nitrate, phosphate and potassium.
However, the organic compounds can be digested by soil organisms
such as animals, fungi and bacteria, who then release inorganic ions that the plants can use (refer to the nitrogen cycle).
Some advantages of organic fertilisers are: -
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Since the compounds in organic fertilisers are less soluble than those in inorganic fertilisers, the inorganic minerals are released more slowly as they are decomposed. This prevents leaching and means they last longer.
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The organic wastes need to be disposed of anyway, so they are cheap. Furthermore, spreading on to fields means they will not be dumped in landfill sites, where they may have caused uncontrolled leaching.
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The organic material improves soil structure by binding soil particles together and provides food for soil organisms such as earthworms. This improves drainage and aeration.
Some disadvantages: -
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They are less concentrated in minerals than inorganic fertilisers, so more needs to be spread on a filed to have a similar effect.
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They can contain unwanted substances like weed seeds, fungal spores and heavy metals.
5. Eutrophication
Eutrophication refers to the effects of nutrients on aquatic ecosystems. These naturally progress from being oligotrophic (clean water with few nutrients and algae) to eutrophic (murky water with many nutrients and plants) and sometimes to hypertrophic (a swamp with a mass of plants and detritus). This is in fact a common example of succession.
However, in the context of pollution “eutrophication” has come to mean a sudden and dramatic "increase in nutrients due to human activity, which disturbs and eventually destroys the food chain".
The main cause of eutrophication is use [over use of] fertilisers which leach off farmland into the surrounding waters.
Sewage is another cause of eutrophication because liquid waste from houses and factories contain dissolved minerals, such as nitrates and phosphates, which enrich the water.
[insert eutrophication diagram]
Since producer growth is generally limited by availability of minerals, a sudden increase in these causes a sudden increase in producer growth. Algae grow faster than larger plants, so they show a more obvious “bloom”, giving rise to spectacular
phenomena such as red tides. Algae produce oxygen, so at this point the ecosystem is well oxygenated and fish thrive.
However, the fast-growing algae soon out-compete larger plants for light, causing the plants to die.
Algae also grow faster than their consumers, so many will die without being consumed, which is not normal. These both lead to a sudden increase in detritus.
Sewage may also contain organic matter, which adds to the detritus.
Decomposing microbes can multiply quickly in response to this, and being aerobic they use up oxygen faster than it can be replaced by photosynthesis or diffusion from the air. The decreased oxygen concentration kills larger aerobic animals and encourages the growth of anaerobic bacteria, who release toxic waste products.
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD). BOD measures the rate of oxygen consumption by a sample of water, and therefore gives a good indication of eutrophication.
A high BOD means lots of organic material and aerobic microbes, i.e. eutrophication.
The method is simple: a sample of water is taken and its O2 concentration is measured using an oxygen meter. The sample is then left in the dark for 5 days at 20°C, and the O2 is measured again.
The BOD is then calculated from:
Original O2 concentration – final O2 concentration.
The more oxygen used up over the 5 days (in mg.dm-3) the higher the BOD. The higher the BOD the more polluted the water is.
This table shows some typical BOD values.
[insert BOD table]
Aquatic ecosystems can slowly recover from a high BOD as oxygen dissolves from the air, but long-term solutions depend on reducing the amount of minerals leaching into the water. This can be achieved by applying inorganic fertilisers more carefully, by using organic fertilisers, by using low phosphate detergents, and by removing soluble minerals by precipitation in modern sewage plants.
As a last resort eutrophic lakes can be dredged to remove mineral-rich sediment, but this is expensive and it takes a long time for the ecosystem to recover. This has been done in the Norfolk Broads.
A Level Biology - Analysing the effect of Agriculture on Biodiversity using Spearman's Rank
A Level Biology - The Hardy-Weinberg Principle
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★ AQA A Level Biology Specification Reference: - 3.4.5 Species and taxonomy. A phylogenetic classification system attempts to arrange species into groups based on their evolutionary origins and relationships. It uses a hierarchy in which smaller groups are placed within larger groups, with no overlap between groups. Each group is called a taxon (plural taxa). One hierarchy comprises the taxa: domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species. Each species is universally identified by a binomial consisting of the name of its genus and species, eg, Homo sapiens.
★ CIE A Level Biology Specification Reference: - 18.2 Classification: Organisms studied locally may be used to show how hierarchical classification systems are organised. a) describe the classification of species into the taxonomic hierarchy of domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species.
★ Edexcel A Level Biology (Biology A – Salters-Nuffield) Specification Reference: - Topic 4: Biodiversity and Natural Resources. Investigation of taxonomic hierarchy. 4.6 i) Understand that classification is a means of organising the variety of life based on relationships between organisms using differences and similarities in phenotypes and in genotypes, and is built around the species concept.
★ Edexcel A Level Biology (Biology B) Specification Reference: - Topic 3: Classification and Biodiversity. 3.1 Classification i Know that the classification system consists of a hierarchy of domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species.
★ OCR A Level Biology (Biology A) Specification Reference: - 4.2.2 Classification and evolution. Classification is an attempt to impose a hierarchy on the complex and dynamic variety of life on Earth. Learners should be able to demonstrate and apply their knowledge and understanding of: (a) the biological classification of species. To include the taxonomic hierarchy of kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species AND domain. (b) the binomial system of naming species and the advantage of such a system. d) the relationship between classification and phylogeny. Cladistics and phylogenetic definition of species.
★ OCR A Level Biology (Biology B) Specification Reference: - 3.1.3 The development of species: evolution and classification. Learners should be able to demonstrate and apply their knowledge and understanding of: (a) the concepts of biological classification and species. To include the taxonomic ranks in the hierarchy of classification (domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species) AND an outline of the biological and phylogenetic species concepts AND an outline of the biological and phylogenetic species concepts.
★ WJEC A Level Biology Specification Reference: - Continuity of Life. 1. All organisms are related through their evolutionary history. This topic covers biodiversity and classification. The variety of living organisms that exists today has evolved as a result of natural selection. Modern techniques have allowed more accurate classification to confirm evolutionary relationships. (a) the classification of organisms into groups based on their evolutionary relationships and that classification places organisms into discrete and hierarchical groups with other closely related species (b) the need for classification and its tentative nature.
★ AQA A Level Biology Specification Reference: - 3.4.5 Species and taxonomy. Two organisms belong to the same species if they are able to produce fertile offspring. Courtship behaviour as a necessary precursor to successful mating. The role of courtship in species recognition. A phylogenetic classification system attempts to arrange species into groups based on their evolutionary origins and relationships. It uses a hierarchy in which smaller groups are placed within larger groups, with no overlap between groups. Each group is called a taxon (plural taxa). One hierarchy comprises the taxa: domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species. Each species is universally identified by a binomial consisting of the name of its genus and species, eg, Homo sapiens.
★ CIE A Level Biology Specification Reference: - 18.2 Classification: Organisms studied locally may be used to show how hierarchical classification systems are organised. a) describe the classification of species into the taxonomic hierarchy of domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species.
★ Edexcel A Level Biology (Biology A – Salters-Nuffield) Specification Reference: - Topic 4: Biodiversity and Natural Resources. Investigation of taxonomic hierarchy. 4.6 i) Understand that classification is a means of organising the variety of life based on relationships between organisms using differences and similarities in phenotypes and in genotypes, and is built around the species concept. ii) Understand the process and importance of critical evaluation of new data by the scientific community, which leads to new taxonomic groupings.
★ Edexcel A Level Biology (Biology B) Specification Reference: - Topic 3: Classification and Biodiversity. 3.1 Classification i Know that the classification system consists of a hierarchy of domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species.
★ OCR A Level Biology (Biology A) Specification Reference: - 4.2.2 Classification and evolution. Classification is an attempt to impose a hierarchy on the complex and dynamic variety of life on Earth. Learners should be able to demonstrate and apply their knowledge and understanding of: (a) the biological classification of species. To include the taxonomic hierarchy of kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species AND domain. (b) the binomial system of naming species and the advantage of such a system.
★ OCR A Level Biology (Biology B) Specification Reference: - 3.1.3 The development of species: evolution and classification. Learners should be able to demonstrate and apply their knowledge and understanding of: (a) the concepts of biological classification and species. To include the taxonomic ranks in the hierarchy of classification (domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species) AND an outline of the biological and phylogenetic species concepts.
★ WJEC A Level Biology Specification Reference: - Continuity of Life. 1. All organisms are related through their evolutionary history. This topic covers biodiversity and classification. The variety of living organisms that exists today has evolved as a result of natural selection. Modern techniques have allowed more accurate classification to confirm evolutionary relationships. (a) the classification of organisms into groups based on their evolutionary relationships and that classification places organisms into discrete and hierarchical groups with other closely related species (b) the need for classification and its tentative nature.
★ AQA A Level Biology Specification Reference: - 3.4.6 Biodiversity within a community. Biodiversity can relate to a range of habitats, from a small local habitat to the Earth. Species richness is a measure of the number of different species in a community. An index of diversity describes the relationship between the number of species in a community and the number of individuals in each species. Calculation of an index of diversity (d). (use of Spearman's Rank).
★ CIE A Level Biology Specification Reference: - 18.1 Biodiversity. Biodiversity is much more than a list of all the species in a particular area. e) use Spearman’s rank correlation and Pearson’s linear correlation to analyse the relationships between the distribution and abundance of species and abiotic or biotic factors (the formula for these correlations will be provided) f) use Simpson’s Index of Diversity to calculate the biodiversity of a habitat and state the significance of different values of D.
★ Edexcel A Level Biology (Biology A – Salters-Nuffield) Specification Reference: - Topic 4: Biodiversity and Natural Resources. iii) Understand how biodiversity can be compared in different habitats using a formula to calculate an index of diversity (D).
★ Edexcel A Level Biology (Biology B) Specification Reference: - Topic 10: Ecosystems. Understanding principles of sampling, including use of a formula to calculate an index of diversity; Spearman’s rank, correlation coefficient; Be able to use statistical tests to analyse data, including t-test and Spearman rank correlation coefficient.
★ OCR A Level Biology (Biology A) Specification Reference: - 4.2 Biodiversity: (c) how to measure species richness and species evenness in a habitat. (d) the use and interpretation of Simpson’s Index of Diversity (D) to calculate the biodiversity of a habitat. The interpretation of both high and low values of Simpson’s Index of Diversity (D). 4.2.2 Classification and evolution. (f) the different types of variation. Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient to consider the relationship of the data.
★ OCR A Level Biology (Biology B) Specification Reference: - Module 4: Energy, reproduction and populations . Select and use a statistical test: the Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient. 4.3.2 The impact of population increase: the ecological, economic and scientific importance of species biodiversity. To include aesthetic, medical and agricultural considerations and the use of statistical methods to assess species biodiversity (e.g. Simpson’s Diversity Index).
★ WJEC A Level Biology Specification Reference: - Continuity of Life. 1. All organisms are related through their evolutionary history. This topic covers biodiversity and classification. (h) biodiversity as the number and variety of organisms found within a specified geographic region (i) biodiversity varying spatially and over time and affected by many factors (j) biodiversity can be assessed in a habitat e.g. Simpson’s Diversity Index.