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Grade 11 University Biology – Unit 1 Diversity Classifying Types of Diversity Section 1.4 – Pages 31-37 Biodiversity refers to the variation of all living organisms in a given local, regional or global area considered at a multiple levels of organization and from a range of different perspectives. In your own words and using the attached pictures and your textbook, define each category of diversity. Category Species Diversity Your Definition Genetic Diversity Ecosystem Diversity Variety and abundance of a species in a given area Number of different species in a given area, their relative distribution and their relative proportions Illustration Category Your Definition Compositional Diversity Structural Diversity Functional Diversity Question - Why is Diversity Important? Illustration Genetic Diversity Genes are the genetic material that controls the expression and inheritance of traits. Individual variation is generally the difference in genes. Genetic Diversity within a population is the GENE POOL (i.e., all the genes of all the individuals in a population). A POPULATION is a group of individuals of the same species in a given area at a specific time. Genetic Diversity is generally greater within a species than a population. Why? Genetic Diversity is vital to disease resistance. Populations with limited genetic diversity are more prone to disease. If all individuals have the same genetic makeup and are susceptible to a disease, the population will likely go extinct. Genetic Diversity also allows populations and species to survive changing environmental conditions (e.g., climate changes) Ecosystem Diversity This refers to the variety of ecosystems in the biosphere. ECOSYSTEM consists of all the organisms living (biotic) in a given area, plus the non-living (abiotic) physical components of the environment (e.g., soil, water, sunlight, latitude) in which the living organisms interact. Ecosystems can be very small or very large. BIOSPHERE is the variation of life forms on Earth. Due to the variety of interactions among organisms and the wide range of abiotic factors, ecosystem diversity on Earth is very high. TASK Do Activity 1.3 – Sustainability and Diversity: Find a Balance? on Page 33 The following information will help you address the questions. Paraphrased from - Science Daily. 1 March 2010. Pesticide Atrazine can turn Male Frogs into Females. (Online). Available http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/03/100301151927.htm Trivedi, Bijap P. 16 April 2002. Hermaphrodite Frogs caused by Popular Weed Killer. National Geographic News. (Online). Available http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/04/0416_020416_TVfrog.html Atrazine, one of the world's most widely used pesticides, wreaks havoc with the sex lives of adult male frogs, emasculating three-quarters of them and turning one in 10 into females “The 75 percent that are chemically castrated are essentially dead because of their inability to reproduce in the wild. These male frogs are missing testosterone and all the things that testosterone controls, including sperm,” reports University of California Biology Professor Tyrone Hayes. “Their fertility is as low as 10% in some cases, and that is only if we isolate those animals and pair them with females. In an environment where they are competing with unexposed animals, they have zero chance of reproducing," Hayes said. The 10% or more that turn from males into females - something not known to occur under natural conditions in amphibians - can successfully mate with male frogs but, because they are genetically male, all their offspring are male. "When we grow these guys up, depending on the family, we will get anywhere from 10 to 50 percent females," Hayes said. "In a population, the genetically male females can decrease or wipe out a population just because they skew sex ratios so badly." Though the experiments were performed on a common laboratory frog, the African clawed frog (Xenopus laevis), field studies indicate that atrazine, a potent endocrine disruptor, similarly affects frogs in the wild, and could possibly be one of the causes of amphibian declines around the globe, Hayes said. Hayes concludes that atrazine is a likely contributor to worldwide amphibian declines. Hayes notes, "These kinds of problems, like sex-reversing animals skewing sex ratios, are much more dangerous than any chemical that would kill off a population of frogs. In exposed populations, it looks like there are frogs breeding but, in fact, the population is being very slowly degraded by the introduction of these altered animals." The USA EPA has set the limit for atrazine contamination for drinking water at 3 parts per billion (ppb). Hayes' and his colleagues found that concentrations of 0.1 ppb caused abnormalities. Tadpoles of the African clawed frog were exposed to atrazine at concentrations as low as 0.1 ppb. When the tadpoles reached adulthood, between 16 and 20% had abnormal reproductive systems. "Some had three ovaries and three testes, some had ovaries on one side and testes on the other, one animal even had six testes," said Hayes. The male voice box also shrunk, resembling the female version, and when males were exposed to levels as high as 25 ppb of atrazine, the frogs showed a tenfold decrease in testosterone levels. Hayes suspects that atrazine feminizes the frogs by increasing production of an enzyme called aromatase, which converts testosterone to estrogen. Some 37 million kilograms of the herbicide atrazine are applied annually in the USA on corn and sorghum to control weeds and increase crop yield. Such widespread use also makes atrazine the most common pesticide contaminant of ground and surface water. Research is showing that atrazine interferes with endocrine hormones, such as estrogen and testosterone -- in fish, amphibians, birds, reptiles, laboratory rodents and even human cell lines at levels of parts per billion. Recent studies also found a possible link between human birth defects and low birth weight and atrazine exposure in the womb. Ecosystem Services Ecosystem Services are the benefits experienced by organisms, including humans, provided by sustainable ecosystems. See Table 1.6 on Page 34 Table 1 is a dataset of Beach Day Closings (or “Postings”) at Bay of Quinte beaches between 1988 and 2002. Graph and interpret the data. What value does this data provide with respect to Ecosystem Services? Table 1. Bay of Quinte Beach Day Postings per year Year Bain Park Frankford Centennial Northport Kingsford Riverside Riverside Zwick’s Trenton Deseronto Salmon East West Island River Belleville Belleville Belleville 1988 28 7 0 86 86 0 1989 0 8 0 7 85 81 14 1990 14 14 0 0 68 97 97 43 1991 0 30 0 0 28 211 211 0 1992 8 0 0 0 0 108 98 0 1993 0 0 0 0 121 157 0 1994 35 45 0 0 0 97 97 49 1995 8 0 8 0 0 105 105 11 1996 0 15 6 70 70 7 1997 9 63 15 0 7 60 60 0 1998 0 0 15 8 9 107 107 0 1999 35 17 17 0 7 101 101 0 2000 25 20 17 0 64 64 0 2001 18 62 7 6 104 104 0 2002 7 14 14 0 70 84 0 Source. Quinte Conservation, XCG Consultants and Lower Trent Conservation. 2011. Bay of Quinte Region Pollution Prevention and Control Plan. Final Report. (Online). Available http://quinteconservation.ca/web/images/stories/protecting_our_watersheds/studies/BQRAP_PPCP/bqrap_p pcp_report.pdf Resilience – The ability of an ecosystem to remain functional and stable in the presence of disturbances to its parts Read Ecosystem Function and Species Diversity on Page 35 Interpret the graphs (Figure 1.21 on Page 35) Do Thought-Lab Investigation 1-B “Resilience of a Grassland Ecosystem” on Page 39 Questions Page 33, Questions 20-23 and Page 37, Questions 1-4, 8-9 Classifying Types of Diversity – Teacher Notes Category Species Diversity Your Definition Genetic Diversity Ecosystem Diversity Compositional Diversity Variety and abundance of a species in a given area Number of different species in a given area, their relative distribution and their relative proportions Variety of heritable characteristics (genes) in a population of interbreeding individuals Variation among the characteristics of individuals within the species as determined by their genetic makeup Variety of species in the biosphere Combination of different species and the ensuing populations and community dynamics that occur in a given area Based on the different number of elements in a given system (e.g., total number of genes within a species, total number of species in a community) Structural Diversity Based on variation in patterns and organization of species genetics and morphology, specific habitats, populations and communities in a system Functional Diversity Based on the number of variation of ecological processes (e.g., predator-prey interactions, decomposition, parasitism and nutrient cycling) in a given system Illustration