Biodiversity Lab

Why is biodiversity important anyway???

When a habitat is very diverse with a variety of different species, it is much healthier and more stable!!! One of the reasons for this is that disease doesn’t spread as easily in a diverse community. Consider the potato blight and the subsequent famine that ravaged Ireland in the 1800’s… A third of Ireland’s population was completely dependent on that ONE crop (a monoculture) so it only took ONE disease to wipe out a large portion of the population’s food source. Mass starvation, disease among people, and emigration followed…

More biodiversity = More stability = Healthier ecosystem!!!

The lab…

You will be quantifying (calculating) the biodiversityof a community using the Shannon-Wiener diversity index. The index ranges from about 0 -7; 0 for a community with a single species (no biodiversity), to over 7 for very diverse communities.

The formula for biodiversity is: H = -sum[pi x (ln pi)]

Where pi = ni(number of individuals in one species)

N(total number of individuals overall)

You will also quantify the richness and evenness of a community. Richness is simply the number of species represented in a community. (For planet Earth, it declines along equatorial gradient).Evenness is a measure of how similar the abundance of different species are(for example: if there are 50 trees in a community and 49 are Oak while only one is Elm, the two species represented are NOT even. If there are 25 Oak and 25 Elm, the two species represented are perfectly even). Evenness will range from 0 to about 1; 0 being completely uneven, to 1 for being completely even. (It may work out to slightly over one for acommunity whose species abundance is completely even).

The formula for richness is: S (count up the number of species represented

and that equals richness)

The formula for evenness is: E = H/lnS

The lab write up…

Title

Purpose

Background: A paragraph at least (use the internet or your book – chapter 12 talks about reasons for biodiversity decline worldwide)

Hypothesis: If we measure the biodiversity of the faculty parking lot and the student parking lot, then…

Materials

Procedure: Number form

Results: YOUR OWN data chart (NOT the messy one you used outside)

Analysis: Calculations, clearly state your answers and label; Graph – don’t forget to label your graph!!! And, will you use a bar graph or a line graph? A bar graph makes a comparison or shows measurements, a line graph shows a trend over time.

Conclusion: What are you measuring? Do your results support or reject your hypothesis? (Do NOT use the words “proved correct or incorrect”) What are some possible sources of error?

Post lab questions!! (Answer in complete sentences)

  1. Would you expect the diversity index to be high or low for a shopping mall parking lot? (EXPLAIN why or why not)
  2. Would you expect the diversity index to be high or low for a new car dealership lot? (EXPLAIN)
  3. Would you expect the diversity index to be high or low for a desert ecosystem? (EXPLAIN)
  4. Would you expect the diversity index to be high or low for a tropical rainforest? (EXPLAIN)
  5. Would you expect the diversity index to be high or low for a Christmas tree farm? (EXPLAIN)
  6. Growing only one type of plant is called a monoculture. Give an example of a monoculture and where would a monoculture fall on the Shannon-Wiener index? (Don’t use the potato crop in Ireland).