Back to ESS Topics
3.1.11 min read

Biodiversity and resilience

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 3

IB exam ready

Study like the top scorers do

Access a smart study planner, AI tutor, and exam vault — everything you need to hit your target grade.

Start Free Trial

🌱 Biodiversity and Ecosystem Resilience

Big Idea: Biodiversity is like having a big, talented team. The more variety, the better an ecosystem can handle problems and bounce back (resilience).

What is biodiversity?

Biodiversity means all the different living things in an area. It’s like having lots of different players on a sports team.

  • Habitat diversity (e.g., a park with ponds, woods, and meadows)
  • Species diversity (e.g., birds, insects, trees, and flowers all in one place)
  • Genetic diversity

How does biodiversity help resilience?

Ecosystems with lots of different species are stronger and recover faster from problems, like storms or disease.

  • More species = more connections (like a spider web with lots of threads)
  • Complex food webs can handle losing one species (if one thread breaks, the web still holds)
  • Ecosystems keep working even after change (like a team with lots of substitutes)
More biodiversity = more backup = more resilience!

Redundancy: Nature’s Backup Plan

In diverse ecosystems, several species can do the same job. If one is lost, others can fill in.

  • If bees disappear, other insects (like butterflies or flies) can still pollinate flowers.
  • If one kind of fish is gone, others might eat the same food.
  • This backup system keeps the ecosystem running.
Redundancy = backup workers for every job in nature.

What happens if biodiversity is lost?

With fewer species, ecosystems are weaker and can break down more easily.

  • Fewer species = fewer connections (like a weak spider web)
  • Simple food webs are easy to break
  • Disturbances (like disease or pollution) have a bigger impact
  • Ecosystems can reach a tipping point (e.g., a forest turning into grassland after too many trees are lost)

How are the levels of biodiversity connected?

All three levels of biodiversity work together, like parts of a machine.

  • More habitats = more places for species to live (e.g., a rainforest has trees, rivers, and ground cover)
  • More species = more genetic diversity (e.g., lots of types of birds means more variety within each type)
  • Genetic diversity helps species adapt to change (e.g., some plants survive drought better than others)

Ready to master Biodiversity and resilience?

Practice with MCQs, short answer questions, and extended response questions. Get instant AI feedback to improve your understanding.