Biodiversity and Conservation
"Every species is a library of evolutionary wisdom. When a species goes extinct, we burn a library."
1. Chapter Overview
BIODIVERSITY = the VARIETY of life on Earth. This chapter covers: three LEVELS of biodiversity (genetic, species, ecosystem), its IMPORTANCE (ecological, economic, ethical), WHY it's declining (the HIPPO factors), and HOW we're trying to conserve it (in-situ and ex-situ). India, as a mega-biodiverse country, features prominently.
2. Levels of Biodiversity
| Level | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Genetic | Variation in GENES within a SPECIES | Different rice varieties (India had 100,000+ traditional varieties) |
| Species | Variety of SPECIES in a region | Tigers, elephants, orchids, frogs |
| Ecosystem | Variety of ECOSYSTEMS (habitats) | Rainforests, coral reefs, mangroves, deserts, grasslands |
3. Why Biodiversity Matters
Ecological Services
- Pollination (bees, butterflies → food crops)
- Nutrient cycling (decomposers)
- Climate regulation (forests)
- Water purification (wetlands)
- Pest control (birds, spiders, bats)
Economic Value
- Food, medicine, timber, fibres — ALL originally from biodiversity
- Tourism (wildlife tourism; coral reefs alone = billions $/year)
- Genetic resources for crop breeding, pharmaceuticals
Ethical and Aesthetic Value
- Species have a RIGHT TO EXIST — irrespective of human use
- Beauty, wonder, cultural significance
4. Biodiversity Loss — The HIPPO Factors
| Factor | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Habitat Loss | DEFORESTATION, wetland draining, urbanisation — the #1 cause. Tropical forests: highest biodiversity, fastest destruction. |
| Invasive Species | Non-native species OUTCOMPETE native ones. Lantana in Indian forests; water hyacinth in lakes. |
| Pollution | Pesticides, industrial waste, plastic, air pollution — poison ecosystems. |
| Population (human) | More people → more resources, more land conversion, more pollution. |
| Over-exploitation | Overfishing, overhunting, illegal wildlife trade (tiger bones, rhino horn, elephant ivory). |
IUCN Red List Categories
- Extinct → Extinct in the Wild → Critically Endangered → Endangered → Vulnerable → Near Threatened → Least Concern
- India's endangered: Bengal tiger, one-horned rhino, Asiatic lion, great Indian bustard, gharial, Gangetic dolphin
5. Conservation Strategies
In-Situ Conservation (On-Site)
- Protect species IN their natural habitat
- National Parks (106 in India): strict protection. Corbett, Kaziranga, Gir.
- Wildlife Sanctuaries (565+): some human activities allowed.
- Biosphere Reserves (18): Nilgiri, Sundarbans, Nanda Devi — large, multi-use zones.
- Biodiversity Hotspots: regions with HIGH endemism AND HIGH threat (>70% habitat lost). 36 globally. India has 4: Western Ghats, Himalayas, Indo-Burma, Sundaland (Nicobar).
Ex-Situ Conservation (Off-Site)
- Protect species OUTSIDE their natural habitat
- Zoos, botanical gardens
- Seed banks (Svalbard Global Seed Vault — 'Doomsday Vault')
- Gene banks, cryopreservation
6. India as a Mega-Biodiverse Country
- One of 17 MEGA-BIODIVERSE countries (8% of world's species on 2.4% land)
- 4 biodiversity hotspots are partially/wholly in India
- Rich in: mammals (tiger, elephant, rhino, lion), birds (1,300+ species), reptiles, amphibians, plants (~47,000 species)
- Threats: habitat loss, poaching, human-wildlife conflict
7. Exam Focus
- Three levels of biodiversity (genetic, species, ecosystem)
- HIPPO factors for biodiversity loss
- In-situ vs ex-situ conservation with examples
- IUCN categories — Endangered species of India
- Biodiversity hotspots — definition, India's 4
8. Conclusion
Biodiversity is the web of life — and we're CUTTING the threads:
- LEVELS: Genetic, species, ecosystem — all three matter
- LOSS: HIPPO — Habitat loss is the biggest driver
- CONSERVATION: In-situ (protected areas, hotspots) and ex-situ (zoos, seed banks)
- INDIA: Mega-biodiverse, four hotspots, enormous responsibility
Protecting biodiversity is not a luxury. It is the most practical form of self-preservation.
