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Ashmo Ashmo
wrote...
13 years ago

Out of 1.8 million species that have been classified, 1.3 million of them are animals. Why is “diversity” so important to the health of an ecosystem? Why is taxonomy (classification of species) important to humans?
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ppk
wrote...
Valued Member
On Hiatus
13 years ago
Diversity is necessary in an ecosystem to help drive the gene pool and further evolution of species. Without diversity in the ecosystem species would be suscepitable biological hazards. On a large scale for example plants have diversity to prevent them from being wiped out by a parasitic attack or something. Not only does diversity ensure species reproduction it also cultivates competion. This competition can also be a benefit to species reproduction ensuring that the most fit survive. The diversity of ecosystems is also important because different ecosystems have different properties; for example, wetlands purify water and forests take up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. In addition, ecosystems have patterns and properties that cannot be completely understood just by looking at the individual species. For example, by taking up carbon dioxide, forest ecosystems could help control global warming.
ppk
wrote...
Valued Member
On Hiatus
13 years ago
I also thought you would find this important

THE IMPORTANCE OF BIODIVERSITY

At the ecosystem level, biodiversity provides the conditions and drives the processes that sustain the global economy – and our very survival as a species. The benefits and services provided by ecosystems include:

>> Generation of soils and maintenance of soil quality

The activities of microbial and animal species – including bacteria, algae, fungi, mites, millipedes and worms – condition soils, break down organic matter, and release essential nutrients to plants. These processes play a key role in the cycling of such crucial elements as nitrogen, carbon and phosphorous between the living and non-living parts of the biosphere.

>> Maintenance of air quality

Plant species purify the air and regulate the composition of the atmosphere, recycling vital oxygen and filtering harmful particles resulting from industrial activities.

>> Maintenance of water quality
Wetland ecosystems (swamps, marshes, etc.) absorb and recycle essential nutrients, treat sewage, and cleanse wastes. In estuaries, molluscs remove nutrients from the water, helping to prevent nutrient over-enrichment and its attendant problems, such as eutrophication arising from fertilizer run-off. Trees and forest soils purify water as it flows through forest ecosystems. In preventing soils from being washed away, forests also prevent the harmful siltation of rivers and reservoirs that may arise from erosion and landslides.

>> Pest control

Around 99 per cent of potential crop pests are controlled by a variety of other organisms, including insects, birds and fungi. These natural pesticides are in many ways superior to their artificial equivalents, since pests can often develop resistance to chemical controls.

>> Detoxification and decomposition of wastes

Some 130 billion metric tons of organic waste is processed every year by earth’s decomposing organisms. Many industrial wastes, including detergents, oils, acids and paper, are also detoxified and decomposed by the activities of living things. In soils, the end product of these processes – a range of simple inorganic chemicals – is returned to plants as nutrients. Higher (vascular) plants can themselves serve to remove harmful substances from groundwater.

>> Pollination and crop production

Many flowering plants rely on the activities of various animal species – bees, butterflies, bats, birds, etc. – to help them reproduce through the transportation of pollen. More than one-third of humanity’s food crops depend on this process of natural pollination. Many animal species have evolved to perform an additional function in plant reproduction through the dispersal of seeds.

>> Climate stabilization

Plant tissues and other organic materials within land and ocean ecosystems act as repositories of carbon, helping to slow the build-up of atmospheric carbon dioxide, and thus contributing to climate stabilization. Ecosystems also exert direct influences on regional and local weather patterns. Moisture released into the atmosphere by rainforests, for example, causes regular rainstorms, limiting water loss from the region and helping to control the surface temperature. In cold climates, meanwhile, forests act as insulators and as windbreaks, helping to mitigate the impacts of freezing temperatures.

>> Prevention and mitigation of natural disasters
Forests and grasslands protect landscapes against erosion, nutrient loss, and landslides through the binding action of roots. Ecosystems bordering regularly flooding rivers (floodplain forests and wetlands) help to absorb excess water and thus reduce the damage caused by floods. Certain coastal ecosystems (salt marshes, mangrove forests, etc.) prevent the erosion of coastlines.

>> Provision of food security

Biodiversity provides the vast majority of our foodstuffs. The annual world fish catch, for example (averaging 100 million metric tons), represents humanity’s most important source of wild animal protein, with over 20 per cent of the population in Africa and Asia dependent on fish as their primary source of protein. Terrestrial animals, meanwhile, supply an array of food products: eggs, milk, meat, etc. Wild biodiversity provides a wide variety of important foodstuffs, including fruits, game meats, nuts, mushrooms, honey, spices and flavorings. These wild foods are especially important when agricultural supplies fail. Indeed, wild biodiversity guards against the failure of even the most advanced agricultural systems. For example, the productivity of many of the developed world’s agricultural crops is maintained through the regular assimilation of new genes from wild relatives of these crops. These wild genes offer resistance to the pests and diseases that pose an ever-evolving threat to harvests.
jack Author
wrote...
13 years ago
Thats a great answer PPK Thanx
wrote...
Staff Member
13 years ago
Please mark this as solved if your question is answered...
- Master of Science in Biology
- Bachelor of Science
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