Everything about Species Richness totally explained
Species richness is the number of species in a given area. It is represented in
equation form as
.
Typically, species richness is used in
conservation studies to determine the sensitivity of ecosystems and their resident species. The actual number of species calculated alone is largely an arbitrary number. These studies, therefore, often develop a rubric or measure for valuing the species richness number(s) or adopt one from previous studies on similar ecosystems.
Factors affecting species richness
There is a strong inverse
correlation in many groups between species richness and
latitude - the farther from the
equator, the fewer species can be found, even when compensating for the reduced
surface area in higher latitudes due to the
spherical geometry of the earth. Equally, as
altitude increases, species richness decreases, indicating an effect of area, available energy, isolation and/or zonation (intermediate elevations can receive species from higher and lower).
Latitude
Latitudinal gradient
See also:
Rapoport's rule and
Latitudinal gradients in species diversity
- The species richness increase from high latitudes to the low latitudes.
- The peak of the species richness isn't at Equator, however. It is deducted that the peak is between 20-30°N.
- The gradient of species richness is asymmetrical about the equator. The level of species richness increase rapidly from the north region but decrease slowly from the equator to southern region.
Area effect
The latitudinal gradients of the species richness may result from the effect of area. The area at lower latitudes is larger than that at higher latitudes, leading to higher species richness at lower latitudes.
Productivity
The latitudinal gradients of species richness may be result from the energy available to the ecosystems. At lower latitudes, there are higher amounts of energy available because of more solar radiation, more resources (for example, minerals and water); as a result, higher levels of species richness can be allowed at lower latitudes. However, there have been relevant studies showing that species richness and primary productivity are actually negatively correlated.
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, an international ecological effort initiated by the United Nations, states:
"In most ecosystems, changes in the number of species are the consequences of changes in major abiotic and disturbance factors, so that the ecosystem effects of species richness (number of species) per se is expected to be both comparatively small and very difficult to isolate. For example, variation in primary productivity depends strongly on temperature and precipitation at the global scale and on soil resources and disturbance regime at the region-to-landscape-to-local scales. Factors that increase productivity, such as nutrient addition, often lead to lower species richness because more productive species outcompete less productive ones. In nature, therefore, high species diversity and high productivity are often not positively correlated."
Area
The
species-area relationship is commonly approximated as following equation:
or
where S is the number of species, reflecting the species richness (sometimes also called species diversity), A is the area given in hectares, and c and z are constants. c is the species accumulation factor, usually between 0.2 and 0.5; z is the species richness factor, usually between 20 and 2000 species per hectare. This equation was first described by
Svante Arrhenius in 1921 and explains the variation of species richness among different areas .
Sampling
Species richness may not really relate to the area size but the statistical artifact. More species can be recorded maybe just because more samples are collected in larger area.
Habitat diversity
It is possible that larger area contain more habitats as it's said that larger area is more topographically and environmentally diverse. Therefore, there are more opportunities for more species to set up their populations due to higher habitat diversity.
Relationship between endemism and species richness
The levels of endemism and that of species richness are frequently positively correlated. However, on some oceanic islands, there are high levels of endemism but the levels of species richness are quite low.
Other methods for measuring biodiversity
Adjusting the species richness
The most common formula for working out Species Diversity is the Simpson's diversity index, which uses the following formula:
D=N(N-1)/Σn(n-1)
Where:
D = diversity index
N = Total number of organisms of all species found
n = number of individuals of a particular species
A high D value suggests a stable and ancient site, while a low D value could suggest a polluted site, recent colonisation or agricultural management.
Usually used in studies of vegetation but can also be applied to animals.
In order to account for the probability of missing some of the actual total number of species present in any count based on a sample population, the Jackknife estimate may be employed:
S=n+((n-1)/n)
k where
S = species richness
n = total number of species present in sample population
k = number of "unique" species (of which only one organism was found in sample population)
Similarly the equation may also be noted as:
S = E + k(n-1)/n where
E = the summation of number of species in each sample
k = number of rare/unique species
n = number of sample
As well, when looking at local diversity the appropriate formula to use is:
S = cAz where
c = a specific number for each taxa
A = the area of study
z = the slope perimeter
Other measures of biodiversity may also take into account the rarity of the taxa, and the amount of evolutionary novelty they embody.
Weakness
As a measure of biodiversity, species richness suffers from the lack of a good definition of "species." There are at least 7 definitions, with their own strength and weakness. Still, it's easy to measure, and is well studied.
Species richness fails to take into consideration species evenness. Other measures of biodiversity, such as the Simpson index, the Shannon index, and the fundamental biodiversity parameter of the unified neutral theory of biodiversity take species evenness into consideration.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Species Richness'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://species_richness.totallyexplained.com">Species richness Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |