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Why Is Biodiversity Important- A Primer

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Any number of people want to know “Why is biodiversity important?” One answer is that is important because it represents the almost infinite variety of plant and animal life, and the variety of the types of Earth's ecosystems that support life as we know it. It enables humans to survive in what would be otherwise be some very adverse conditions.

Any study of “why is biodiversity important” can yield fascinating results. Biodiversity is the very stuff that supports the evolution and differentiation among the varying species. It's why cats are cats and horses are horses and humans are humans. And, further, it is responsible for the differences among groups within the larger species. Look at how many seemingly different types of humans there are. Or jungle cats. Or birds.

Water, wind, and sunlight generate much of the energy we use, and the action of the planet on various substances over the course of centuries create and provide things like coal, which is used to generate heat and more energy. Energy from wind, water, sunlight, and coal heats our homes and powers all our appliances Decaying animal matter has, over the centuries created the fossil fuels we use on a daily basis to power the vehicles that make transportation relatively easy and convenient.

Without biodiversity we would be (if we existed at all) a homogeneous population, with each of us having the same vulnerabilities. This would mean that in, say an epidemic, we would all be killed since there would be no biologic differences that would enable some of us to survive and adapt. Much of our modern medicine is based on combinations of biologically diverse substances isolated from various plants (which we, therefore, label medicinal). Even before the rise of modern medicine, shamans and wise women used various plants to achieve various results. Without those plants, and the great variety of insects that pollinate and cross-pollinate them, humans would be much more vulnerable to disease.

Various industries consider the question of “why is biodiversity important,” because their industries provide lumber, granite, and marble – to name a few of the building materials much human habitation depends upon – we would largely be without shelter.

While humans are omnivorous, without biodiversity there would be virtually no variety in our diets. One reason to ask “why is biodiversity important?” is because biodiversity provides a literal treasure trove of foods, from things as common as wheat or corn to things as exotic as some of the seafood used in sushi. Further, not all the nutrients we need are in any particular food, so without a diverse base of foods to make combinations from our general health would suffer.

The most important reason for asking “why is biodiversity important?” is that biodiversity sustains the bodies we live in, and affects the lives we lead, and the societies we form.


Other Global Biodiversity Information related Articles

Biodiversity Mainstreaming
Solution To The Loss Of Biodiversity
Biodiversity Definition
Importance Of Biodiversity
Values Of Biodiversity

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Global Biodiversity Information News

Where is the world's wildlife? Interactive map plots global species distributions - The Guardian (blog)


Where is the world's wildlife? Interactive map plots global species distributions
The Guardian (blog)
... select sources from which you want to view data and click "Map Selected Layers". Alternatively, right-click on any point of the world's surface to see a list of animals found there. Sources include the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, ...

Read more...


Filling In the Blanks on a Map of Life - New York Times (blog)


New York Times (blog)

Filling In the Blanks on a Map of Life
New York Times (blog)
... based on over 200 years of data from field guides, museums, citizen scientists and groups like the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and the World Wildlife Fund.
Not the Game of Life, But a Map of LifeDirectionsMag.com (press release)

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Step Up Efforts to Protect Biodiversity - Molewa - AllAfrica.com


Step Up Efforts to Protect Biodiversity - Molewa
AllAfrica.com
Speaking at the launch of the National Biodiversity Assessment 2011 report, during International Day for Biodiversity celebrations at iSimangaliso Wetland Park, Molewa said biodiversity was the basis for human and socio-economic development.

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Map of Life goes live - Nature.com


Nature.com

Map of Life goes live
Nature.com
The demo release of Map of Life will focus on terrestrial vertebrate and fish species — combining 150 million point-occurrence records from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), an intergovernmental warehouse of digitized species data, ...
'Map of Life' Aims to Document Global Distribution and Abundance of Known ...Ecology Global Network

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New 'Map of Life' project aims to show distribution of all animals, plants on ... - Phys.Org


New 'Map of Life' project aims to show distribution of all animals, plants on ...
Phys.Org
In the biodiversity arena, the Global Biodiversity Information Facility in Copenhagen has developed an important resource that provides access to more than 300 million records of plant and animal occurrences, which is one of the distributional ...

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