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  2. Measurement of biodiversity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measurement_of_biodiversity

    Species evenness is the relative number of individuals of each species in a given area. [1] Species richness [2] is the number of species present in a given area. Species diversity [3] is the relationship between species evenness and species richness. There are many ways to measure biodiversity within a given ecosystem.

  3. Abundance (ecology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abundance_(ecology)

    SAD is a measurement of how common, or rare species are within an ecosystem. [5] This allows researchers to assess how different species are distributed throughout an ecosystem. SAD is one of the most basic measurements in ecology and is used very often, therefore many different methods of measurement and analysis have developed.

  4. Relative species abundance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_species_abundance

    Relative species abundance is a component of biodiversity and is a measure of how common or rare a species is relative to other species in a defined location or community. [1] Relative abundance is the percent composition of an organism of a particular kind relative to the total number of organisms in the area.

  5. Species richness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Species_richness

    Resampling methods can be used to bring samples of different sizes to a common footing. [2] Properties of the sample, especially the number of species only represented by one or a few individuals, can be used to help estimating the species richness in the population from which the sample was drawn. [3] [4] [5]

  6. Unified neutral theory of biodiversity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_neutral_theory_of...

    abundance class 1 1-2 2-4 4-8 8-16 species 5 0 1.5 1.5 1 The three species of abundance four thus appear, 1.5 in abundance class 24, and 1.5 in 4–8. The above method of analysis cannot account for species that are unsampled: that is, species sufficiently rare to have been recorded zero times.

  7. Rank abundance curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rank_abundance_curve

    It overcomes the shortcomings of biodiversity indices that cannot display the relative role different variables played in their calculation. The curve is a 2D chart with relative abundance on the Y-axis and the abundance rank on the X-axis. X-axis: The abundance rank. The most abundant species is given rank 1, the second most abundant is 2 and ...

  8. Rarefaction (ecology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rarefaction_(ecology)

    The technique of rarefaction was developed in 1968 by Howard Sanders in a biodiversity assay of marine benthic ecosystems, as he sought a model for diversity that would allow him to compare species richness data among sets with different sample sizes; he developed rarefaction curves as a method to compare the shape of a curve rather than absolute numbers of species.

  9. Species diversity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Species_diversity

    Species diversity is the number of different species that are represented in a given community (a dataset). The effective number of species refers to the number of equally abundant species needed to obtain the same mean proportional species abundance as that observed in the dataset of interest (where all species may not be equally abundant).