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Whittaker (1972) described three
terms for measuring biodiversity over spatial scales: alpha,beta, and gamma diversity.
Alpha
diversity refers to the diversity within a particular
area or ecosystem, and is usually expressed by the number ofspecies (
If we examine the change in species diversity between these ecosystems then we are measuring the beta diversity . We are counting the total number of species that are unique to each of the ecosystems being compared. Forexample, the beta diversity between the woodland and the hedgerow habitats is 7 (representing the 5 species found in thewoodland but not the hedgerow, plus the 2 species found in the hedgerow but not the woodland). Thus, beta diversity allows usto compare diversity between ecosystems.
Gamma diversity is a measure of the overall diversity for the different ecosystems within aregion. Hunter (2002: 448) defines gamma diversity as "geographic-scale species diversity". In the example in , the total number of species for the three ecosystems 14, which represent the gamma diversity.
Hypothetical species | Woodland habitat | Hedgerow habitat | Open field habitat |
---|---|---|---|
Alpha diversity | 10 | 7 | 3 |
Beta diversity | Woodland vs. hedgerow: 7 | Hedgerow vs. open field: 8 | Woodland vs. open field: 13 |
Gamma diversity | 14 | ||
A | X | ||
B | X | ||
C | X | ||
D | X | ||
E | X | ||
F | X | X | |
G | X | X | |
H | X | X | |
I | X | X | |
J | X | X | |
K | X | ||
L | X | X | |
M | X | ||
N | X |
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