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NotesESS HLTopic 3.2Biodiversity Hotspots (HL only)
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3.2.41 min read

Biodiversity Hotspots (HL only)

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 3

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Contents

  • Biodiversity Hotspots and Key Biodiversity Areas
  • Conflicts in Key Biodiversity Areas
  • Indigenous Land Management in Biodiversity Hotspots
  • Environmental Justice in Conservation
  • Exam-style question (step by step)
Big picture: Biodiversity hotspots are regions with exceptionally high species richness and endemism that are under significant threat. They are a priority for global conservation.
Biodiversity hotspot
A region that contains at least 1,500 endemic vascular plant species (0.5% of global total) and has lost at least 70% of its original habitat.
Key Biodiversity Area (KBA)
A site that contributes significantly to the global persistence of biodiversity, identified using standardised criteria.
Endemic species
A species that is found naturally in only one specific geographic area and nowhere else in the world.

Key facts about biodiversity hotspots

  • 36 recognised biodiversity hotspots worldwide
  • Cover only 2.5% of Earth's land surface
  • Home to more than 50% of the world's plant species as endemics
  • Home to approximately 43% of bird, mammal, reptile, and amphibian species as endemics
  • Examples: Tropical Andes, Mediterranean Basin, Sundaland, Madagascar

Land-use conflicts

  • Agricultural expansion into hotspot areas
  • Urban development and infrastructure projects
  • Tourism development degrading sensitive habitats
  • Competing claims between conservation and development

Resource extraction conflicts

  • Mining and drilling in biodiversity-rich areas
  • Logging of tropical forests
  • Overfishing in marine KBAs
  • Water diversion affecting freshwater ecosystems

Socio-economic pressures

  • Poverty driving unsustainable resource use
  • Population growth increasing demand on land
  • Lack of alternative livelihoods for local communities
  • Inequality between those who benefit from conservation and those who bear costs
IB exam tip: Use specific case studies when discussing conflicts — e.g., palm oil plantations in Sundaland, mining in the Cerrado, or logging in the Congo Basin.

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Key concept: Indigenous communities play a vital role in biodiversity conservation. Indigenous-managed lands have been shown to contain higher biodiversity levels than many government-protected areas.

Value of indigenous land management

  • Deep ecological knowledge passed down through generations
  • Sustainable harvesting practices that maintain ecosystem balance
  • Fire management techniques that promote biodiversity
  • Spiritual and cultural connections that motivate conservation
  • Low-impact land use compared to industrial alternatives

Challenges faced by indigenous land managers

  • Land dispossession and forced displacement
  • Encroachment by extractive industries
  • Climate change altering traditional ecosystems
  • Limited access to political decision-making processes
  • Lack of legal recognition of land rights

Environmental justice principles in conservation

  • Addressing historical injustices — land taken from indigenous peoples for parks
  • Promoting equitable participation in conservation planning
  • Preventing green colonialism — ensuring conservation does not displace communities
  • Upholding the right to nature — all people deserve access to healthy ecosystems
  • Benefit-sharing from conservation activities (e.g., ecotourism revenue)
IB exam tip: Be ready to evaluate conservation approaches from an environmental justice perspective — who benefits, who bears costs, and whose voices are heard in decision-making.

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IB-style question — HL — Biodiversity hotspots, endemism & KBAs

The Cerrado savanna of central Brazil covers approximately 2 million km² and contains 4 800 endemic plant species — species found nowhere else on Earth. Less than 3% of the original Cerrado remains under formal protection.



(a) Explain why the Cerrado qualifies as a biodiversity hotspot. [2]

(b) State one reason why the Cerrado is likely to contain numerous Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs). [1]

How to answer it, step by step

  1. Step 1 — Apply the hotspot criteria (part a)

    • A biodiversity hotspot must meet TWO thresholds: (i) exceptionally high endemism (≥1 500 endemic vascular plant species) AND (ii) significant habitat loss (≥70% of original habitat destroyed).

    • The Cerrado qualifies on both counts: ~4 800 endemic plant species far exceeds the 1 500-species threshold; conversion to soybean and cattle farming has destroyed over 50% of native vegetation (some estimates >80% in core agricultural zones).

    • High beta-diversity (species turnover across the mosaic of grassland, gallery forest, and rocky outcrops) further explains the exceptional number of endemics.
  2. Step 2 — Link endemism to KBAs (part b)

    • KBAs are sites that contribute significantly to the global persistence of biodiversity — they are identified where threatened or restricted-range species concentrate.

    • Because the Cerrado contains thousands of endemic species with no populations elsewhere, any area that supports viable populations of these endemics qualifies as a KBA under the restricted-range criterion.

Final answer

Part (a): you need BOTH criteria (high endemism + significant habitat loss) stated explicitly — one alone earns only 1/2. Do not write 'lots of species' — the mark scheme requires reference to endemic species specifically. Part (b): one well-explained point earns the mark; naming restricted-range or threatened species as the KBA criterion is the strongest answer.



HL. HL.b — The Cerrado conflict illustrates the palm-oil / soy-beef parallel: Brazil's soy expansion is driven by global commodity demand, with traded goods effectively exporting biodiversity loss overseas. HL.c — Indigenous territories (e.g. Xavante lands) overlap significantly with high-endemism zones — indigenous land rights represent a low-cost, high-efficacy tool for de-facto KBA protection. HL.a — Planetary boundary for biosphere integrity (based on Extinction Rate / BII): scientists argue we have already exceeded this boundary, with the Cerrado's loss a major contributor.

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the term endemic species. [2 marks]

Related ESS HL Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

3.1.1Biodiversity and resilience
3.1.2Measuring biodiversity
3.1.3Natural selection
3.1.4Protecting Biodiversity
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3.2.3Human Impact on Biodiversity (HL only)
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