When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ocean Biodiversity Information System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocean_Biodiversity...

    As at July 2018, the OBIS website states that the system provides access to over 45 million observations of nearly 120,000 marine species (the reduced number of names cited being as a result of synonym resolution, i.e. reduction of taxa recorded under multiple names to a single accepted name), based on contributions from 500 institutions from ...

  3. Extinction threshold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extinction_threshold

    A more complex model came up with different results, and in practicing conservation biology this can add more confusion to efforts to save a species from the extinction threshold. Transient dynamics, which are effects on the extinction threshold because of instability in either the metapopulation or environmental conditions, is also a large ...

  4. Red List Index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_List_Index

    The Red List Index (sampled approach) (SRLI) has been developed in order to determine the threat status and also trends of lesser-known and less charismatic species groups. It is a collaboration between IUCN members and is coordinated through the Institute of Zoology (IoZ), the research division of the Zoological Society of London (ZSL).

  5. Biodiversity loss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiversity_loss

    Freshwater species are beginning to decline at twice the rate of species that live on land or in the ocean. This rapid loss has already placed 27% of 29,500 species dependent on fresh water on the IUCN Red List. [100] Global populations of freshwater fish are collapsing due to water pollution and overfishing. Migratory fish populations have ...

  6. Extinction event - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extinction_event

    These papers utilized the compendium to track origination rates (the rate that new species appear or speciate) parallel to extinction rates in the context of geological stages or substages. [60] A review and re-analysis of Sepkoski's data by Bambach (2006) identified 18 distinct mass extinction intervals, including 4 large extinctions in the ...

  7. Latent extinction risk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latent_extinction_risk

    In conservation biology, latent extinction risk is a measure of the potential for a species to become threatened.. Latent risk can most easily be described as the difference, or discrepancy, between the current observed extinction risk of a species (typically as quantified by the IUCN Red List) and the theoretical extinction risk of a species predicted by its biological or life history ...

  8. Background extinction rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Background_extinction_rate

    There are three different ways to calculate background extinction rate. [5] The first is simply the number of species that normally go extinct over a given period of time. For example, at the background rate one species of bird will go extinct every estimated 400 years. [6] Another way the extinction rate can be given is in million species ...

  9. Rarefaction (ecology) - Wikipedia

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

    In ecology, rarefaction is a technique to assess species richness from the results of sampling. Rarefaction allows the calculation of species richness for a given number of individual samples, based on the construction of so-called rarefaction curves. This curve is a plot of the number of species as a function of the number of samples.