Species Diversity
Species Diversity
Species Diversity
Species diversity is the effective number of different species that are represented in a collection of
individuals. Species diversity consists of two components, species richness and species evenness.
Species richness is a simple count of species, whereas species evenness quantifies how equal
the abundances of the species are.
We use
D=
N (N-1)
n (n-1)
to calculate species diversity. The higher the value calculated in an environment means the more
stable it is. It hence means the environment would more likely be able to withstand disturbance.
ecosystem stability depends on the function or character of the ecosystem being considered and the
time scale over which it is being considered.
The greater the stability of the ecosystem the more resilient the species are to disease and
environmental pressure. The more species there are the more likely some will be lost after a
disturbance. Hence, diversity also decreases ecosystem stability in terms of species retention.
NOTE:
Complex and therefor fragile communities are hence only found in stable environments. When you
want to retain ecosystem productivity after a disturbance, more species is better than less.
Population
Biotic potential
A population is the total number of all the organisms of the same species who live in the
same geographical area, and have the capability of interbreeding. Biotic potential is the
maximum reproductive capacity of a population under optimum environmental conditions. This is
usually restricted by environmental resistance.
It is generally only reached when environmental conditions are very favourable. A species reaching its
biotic potential would exhibit exponential population growth and be said to have a high fertility, that is,
how many offspring are produced per mother.
Populations occur in three main forms which includes linear, cubic and exponential as seen in the
diagram below.
The Logistic curve (also known as an S-curve) shows the effect of a limiting factor (in this case the
carrying capacity of the environment).
Environmental Resistance
Environmental resistance are the conditions in the environment that prevent species population from
growing out of control. It is a mixture of biotic and abiotic conditions in the environment. These
conditions includes a mixture of abiotic factors such as temperature, and biotic factors such as natural enemies
(biological control agents) to limit the organism for expressing its full capacity to reproduce.
Carrying capacity
The carrying capacity of a biological species in an environment is the maximum population size of
the species that the environment can sustain indefinitely, given the food, habitat, water and other
necessities available in the environment. It is simply defined as the environment's maximal
load, which is different from the concept of population equilibrium. Figure 1.12 below shows the
carrying capacity of a population.
The following diagram shows three (3) population situations and the carrying capacities associated
with it.