๐Ÿ“ฐ Today's Current AffairsRead Now →
📷 Follow on Instagram

Types of Biodiversity




๐Ÿฆ‹ Chapter 02 ยท Topic 01 ยท Types of Biodiversity

Types of Biodiversity โ€” Genetic, Species & Ecosystem

Understand the three levels of biodiversity, India’s megadiverse status, and alpha-beta-gamma diversity for UPSC & PSC exams.

What is Biodiversity?

Biodiversity refers to the variety of life on Earth โ€” encompassing all living organisms, the genetic differences among them, and the ecosystems they form. The term was coined by Walter G. Rosen in 1985 and later popularised by the renowned biologist E.O. Wilson, who brought it into mainstream scientific and public discourse.

  • Derived from Greek bios (life) + Latin diversitas (variety)
  • Includes diversity at genetic, species, and ecosystem levels
  • Recognised as a critical component of Earth’s life-support systems
  • Formally defined in the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), 1992
โšก Exam Fact: The term “biodiversity” was coined by Walter G. Rosen (1985) โ€” not E.O. Wilson. Wilson popularised it. This distinction is frequently tested in UPSC Prelims.

Three Types of Biodiversity

Biodiversity is studied at three distinct levels, each capturing a different dimension of life’s variety:

TypeDefinitionExamples
Genetic DiversityVariation in genes within a species or populationCrop varieties (rice has 50,000+ varieties), dog breeds, human blood groups
Species DiversityVariety of species in a given areaNumber of bird species in a forest; richness of coral reef fish
Ecosystem DiversityVariety of habitats, ecosystems, and ecological processesMangroves, deserts, grasslands, wetlands, coral reefs

1. Genetic Diversity

  • Refers to the total number of genetic characteristics in the genetic makeup of a species
  • Enables species to adapt to changing environments โ€” the raw material for evolution
  • India has enormous genetic diversity: 50,000+ varieties of rice, 1,000+ varieties of mango
  • Crop wild relatives and traditional breeds are key repositories of genetic diversity
  • Low genetic diversity = higher extinction risk (e.g., cheetah population bottleneck)

2. Species Diversity

  • Most commonly measured form of biodiversity
  • Includes both species richness (number of species) and species evenness (relative abundance)
  • Tropical regions have highest species diversity due to stable climate and high productivity
  • Measured using indices like Shannon-Wiener Index and Simpson’s Index

3. Ecosystem Diversity

  • Variety of ecosystems in a given region โ€” includes habitats, biotic communities, and ecological processes
  • India has remarkable ecosystem diversity: Himalayan glaciers, Thar Desert, Western Ghats rainforests, Sundarbans mangroves, Deccan grasslands
  • Each ecosystem provides unique ecosystem services (provisioning, regulating, cultural, supporting)

India’s Biodiversity Status

India is one of the world’s most biologically rich nations, recognised as one of the 17 megadiverse countries identified by Conservation International.

ParameterIndia’s Status
Share of world’s species7โ€“8% of all recorded species
Share of world’s land areaOnly 2.4%
Plant species~45,000 species (including 15,000 flowering plants)
Animal species~91,000 species
Endemic plant species~33% of flora in hotspot regions
Biodiversity Hotspots4 out of 36 global hotspots
Megadiverse rankAmong top 17 megadiverse countries
๐ŸŒฟ Why is India so biodiverse? India’s unique position at the confluence of three biogeographic realms (Indomalayan, Palearctic, Afrotropical), varied topography from Himalayas to coastal plains, and diverse climate zones create exceptional conditions for biodiversity.

Alpha, Beta & Gamma Diversity

These three concepts, introduced by ecologist R.H. Whittaker (1960), describe biodiversity at different spatial scales:

TypeScaleDefinitionExample
Alpha (ฮฑ) DiversityLocal / Within habitatSpecies diversity within a single community or habitatNumber of bird species in one forest patch
Beta (ฮฒ) DiversityBetween habitatsRate of change in species composition between different habitatsDifference in species between a forest and adjacent grassland
Gamma (ฮณ) DiversityLandscape / RegionalTotal species diversity across a large area or landscapeTotal bird species across all of Western Ghats
โšก Formula: ฮณ (Gamma) = ฮฑ (Alpha) ร— ฮฒ (Beta) โ€” Gamma diversity is the product of local diversity and the degree of habitat differentiation across the landscape.

Importance of Biodiversity

Biodiversity provides value across multiple dimensions โ€” ecological, economic, aesthetic, and ethical:

  • Ecological value: Maintains ecosystem stability, nutrient cycling, water purification, climate regulation, pollination
  • Economic value: Agriculture (crop varieties), medicine (70% of drugs derived from natural sources), timber, fisheries, tourism
  • Aesthetic value: Natural beauty, recreation, cultural inspiration, spiritual significance
  • Ethical / Intrinsic value: Every species has a right to exist regardless of its utility to humans (biocentric view)
  • Option value: Unknown future benefits โ€” many undiscovered species may hold cures for diseases
๐ŸŒฟ Ecosystem Services (TEEB Framework):
โ€ข Provisioning: Food, water, timber, medicines
โ€ข Regulating: Climate regulation, flood control, disease regulation
โ€ข Cultural: Recreation, spiritual, aesthetic values
โ€ข Supporting: Nutrient cycling, soil formation, photosynthesis

Revision Checklist

โœ… Term “biodiversity” coined by Walter G. Rosen (1985); popularised by E.O. Wilson
โœ… Three types: Genetic โ†’ Species โ†’ Ecosystem diversity
โœ… Genetic diversity = variation within species (crop varieties, breeds)
โœ… Species diversity = richness + evenness; measured by Shannon/Simpson index
โœ… Ecosystem diversity = variety of habitats and ecological processes
โœ… India = 17 megadiverse countries; 7โ€“8% world species; only 2.4% land area
โœ… India: 45,000 plant species; 91,000 animal species
โœ… Alpha = within habitat; Beta = between habitats; Gamma = total landscape
โœ… Gamma = Alpha ร— Beta (Whittaker, 1960)
โœ… Four ecosystem service categories: Provisioning, Regulating, Cultural, Supporting