Biodiversity Notes For UPSC Exam
Biodiversity Notes For UPSC Exam
Biodiversity Notes For UPSC Exam
• Researchers have put an average price tag of US $ 33 trillion a year on these fundamental ecosys
tems services, which are largely taken for granted because they are free. This is nearly twice the
value of the global gross national product GNP which is (US $ 18 trillion). Out of the total cost of
various ecosystem services, the soil formation accounts for about 50 per cent, and contributions
of other services like recreation and nutrient cycling, are less than 10 per cent each. The cost of
climate regulation and habitat for wildlife are about 6 per cent each.
Quotes
• We believe that the most crucial action India has to take is to step up our technology to chart
out and understand our biodiversity, to protect it, and above all to forge new technologies out
of our rich biodiversity. If we have to play the game of converting materials into intellectual
products or actual products to be protected legally, let us do so. Let us use these not merely to
enrich a few in our country but to create sustainable wealth for all people. Let us also attempt
global leadership in the production of such commodities. - Kalam, 2020
Pattern of biodiversity
Causes of biodiversity losses: There are four major causes (‘ The Evil Quartet ’ is the sobriquet
(person’s nickname) used to describe them). - HVAC
• Biological Diversity Act 2008 espoused the formation of Biodiversity Management Committees
(BMC)
• Maharasthra has constituted these under the panchayat raj system
Positives
• It will surely give power to the people to decide on the use of their natural wealth, especially at
a time when resources are under threat from various companies and even the government.
• Would increase awareness
negatives
way ahead
• A new UN report has warned that many species of wild bees, butterflies and other insects that
pollinate plants are shrinking toward extinction.
• The report is based on the studies done by a scientific panel brought together by the
Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystems Services (IPBES).
• Two out of five species of invertebrate pollinators, such as bees and butterflies, are on the path
toward extinction
Importance of pollinators
• Pollinators are important to growing fruits, vegetables and cash crops though not so much for
cereal crops.
• Food output worth more than $250billion depend on pollinators especially industries like coffee,
fruits
• Changing nature of agriculture with reduced diversity and wild flowers for pollinators to use as
food
• pesticide use
Indian context
• pollinator declines are well-documented in North America and Europe but have not yet been
well-researched in other parts of the world including India.
• In India, the important pollinators of food crops are various species of honeybee, Apis, such as
A. Dorsata, A. Cerana, A. Florae, A. Andreniformes and A. Laboriosa.
• However, the both pollinators and the quality of pollinator service has declined over time.
Various researchers have reported a decline in the number of honeybee colonies in India. Its
negative effects are increasingly being observed. For example, in the Himalayas, apple yields in
recent years have decreased.
• However the picture in the Indian context, about the exact causes of low yields, is still unclear.
That is to say, we have a very poor knowledge of the pollination systems of our animal
pollinated crops, and how best we can manage the pollinators for optimal yields. This
knowledge gap and lack of expertise have further aggravated this problem.
Solutions
Way forward
• It is not only the science that requires attention. Policies and governance for managing
landscapes — natural, agricultural, urban — are equally important.
• Government agencies must rethink conventional sectoral approaches and narrow disciplinary
perspectives.
• There are many factors involved in the complex environmental challenges threatening human
security today. Only well-integrated approaches can successfully address them.
• India supports the process to develop an international l legally binding instrument on the
conservation and sustainable use of marine biodiversity
• Study reveals modern rates of extinction up to 100 times higher than in past
• Many conservationists have been warning for years that a mass extinction event akin to the one
that wiped out the dinosaurs is occurring as humans degrade and destroy habitats.
• even when they analysed the most conservative extinction rates, the rate at which vertebrates
were being lost forever was far higher than in the last five mass extinctions.
• Under a natural rate of extinction, the study said that two species go extinct per 10,000
species per 100 years, rather than the one species that previous work has assumed.
• Modern rates of extinction were eight to 100 times higher, the authors found. For example,
477 vertebrates have gone extinct since 1900, rather than the nine that would be expected at
natural rates.
• “It’s really signalling we’ve entered a sixth extinction and it’s driven by man,”