BiologyNCERT Class 12 18 PYQs

Biodiversity and ConservationMind Map

Visual interactive concept map for Biodiversity and Conservation — NEET Biology, NCERT Class 12. Covers 6 concept branches with sub-concepts, formulas, PYQ links, and AI explanations on every node.

BiodiversityPatterns of BiodiversityImportanceBiodiversity LossConservationHotspots & Protected Areas
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Biodiversity and Conservation mind map?

6 concept branches · 14 formulas · 27 diagrams · NCERT Class 12 Biology

Core FocusChapter Overview & Analysis

Complete Chapter Roadmap

Biodiversity and Conservation explains the variety of life on Earth, its patterns, value, threats and protection methods. NCERT focuses on three levels of biodiversity: genetic, species and ecosystem diversity. NEET repeatedly asks examples such as genetic diversity in Rauwolfia, species richness in tropics, species-area relationship, the Evil Quartet and conservation approaches. The chapter connects ecology with real-world issues like habitat loss, alien species, extinction, protected areas and hotspots. You should learn definitions, examples, graphs, causes and comparisons rather than isolated facts. The central idea is simple: biodiversity maintains ecosystem stability and human survival, but human activities are reducing it rapidly, so both in-situ and ex-situ conservation are essential.

High-Yield Study Highlights

  • NCERT examples are very important for NEET: Amazon rainforest, Western Ghats, Nile perch in Lake Victoria, Lantana, Parthenium and water hyacinth.
  • Biodiversity patterns are not random; latitude and area strongly affect species richness.
  • Tropical regions support more species because of less seasonal variation, more productivity and longer uninterrupted evolution.
  • Conservation biology is not only about saving animals; it preserves genes, ecosystems and ecosystem services.
  • Protected areas include national parks, wildlife sanctuaries and biosphere reserves with different levels of protection.
  • Hotspots are priority regions because saving small areas can protect many endemic and threatened species.
1

Biodiversity

Biodiversity is the total variety of living organisms and their variability on Earth. NCERT treats it at three main levels: genetic diversity, species diversity and ecosystem diversity. Genetic diversity means variation in genes within a species, such as medicinal plant Rauwolfia vomitoria showing different reserpine potency. Species diversity means the number and relative abundance of species in a region, like amphibian diversity being greater in Western Ghats than Eastern Ghats. Ecosystem diversity means variety of ecosystems such as deserts, rainforests, mangroves, coral reefs and wetlands. Species richness is simply the number of species in an area. For NEET, understanding the hierarchy and examples is more important than memorizing definitions alone.

2

Patterns of Biodiversity

Biodiversity is not evenly distributed. NCERT highlights two major patterns: latitudinal gradient and species-area relationship. Species richness generally increases from high latitudes toward the equator, so tropical regions have far more species than temperate or polar regions. Possible reasons include longer evolutionary time, more stable climate and higher productivity in the tropics. Alexander von Humboldt observed that within a region, species richness increases with explored area, but only up to a limit. This is expressed by the species-area relationship, S = CA^Z. On a log scale, it becomes a straight line. NEET frequently asks the graph, slope values, tropical richness reasons and Humboldt’s contribution.

3

Importance

Biodiversity is valuable because it supports ecosystem stability, human economy, medicine, culture and ethics. Ecologically, diverse ecosystems are more productive, resilient and capable of recovering from disturbances. Biodiversity supports ecosystem services such as pollination, nutrient cycling, climate regulation, soil formation, water purification and oxygen production. Economically, biodiversity provides food, fuel, fibres, timber, drugs, industrial raw materials and genetic resources for crop improvement. Ethical value means every species has an intrinsic right to exist, even if it has no immediate human use. Aesthetic value includes beauty, recreation, ecotourism and spiritual inspiration. NEET often tests ecosystem services, rivet popper hypothesis and why biodiversity loss can destabilize ecosystems.

4

Biodiversity Loss

Biodiversity loss means reduction in genes, species and ecosystems. NCERT emphasizes that current extinction rates are much higher than natural background extinction because of human activities. The four major causes are called the Evil Quartet: habitat loss and fragmentation, overexploitation, alien species invasion and co-extinction. Habitat loss is the most serious cause, especially due to deforestation, agriculture, urbanization, mining and pollution. Overexploitation includes excessive hunting, fishing and harvesting. Alien species can outcompete native species, as seen with Nile perch, Lantana, Parthenium and water hyacinth. Co-extinction occurs when one species disappears and dependent species also vanish. Biodiversity loss reduces ecosystem stability and human survival resources.

5

Conservation

Conservation means protecting, restoring and sustainably managing biodiversity. NCERT divides conservation into in-situ and ex-situ methods. In-situ conservation protects species in their natural habitats, allowing evolution, ecological interactions and natural selection to continue. It includes national parks, wildlife sanctuaries, biosphere reserves, sacred groves and biodiversity hotspots. Ex-situ conservation protects threatened organisms outside their natural habitats through zoological parks, botanical gardens, seed banks, tissue culture, cryopreservation and gene banks. National parks usually provide strict protection, sanctuaries allow some regulated human activity and biosphere reserves include core, buffer and transition zones. NEET often asks comparisons, examples and why in-situ conservation is preferred for whole ecosystem protection.

6

Hotspots & Protected Areas

Biodiversity hotspots are regions with exceptionally high species richness, high endemism and serious habitat loss. They are conservation priorities because protecting a small region can save many unique species. Standard hotspot criteria include at least 1,500 endemic vascular plant species and loss of at least 70 percent of original habitat. India is associated with four global hotspot regions: Himalaya, Indo-Burma, Western Ghats-Sri Lanka and Sundaland, which includes the Nicobar Islands. Protected areas in India include national parks, wildlife sanctuaries, biosphere reserves, conservation reserves and community reserves. Ramsar sites are wetlands of international importance. Conservation success stories include protection efforts for one-horned rhinoceros, tiger, crocodiles and several wetland bird habitats.

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