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Biodiversity is the somewhat hard-to-define quality of variation among living things in a specific ecosystem, in agriculture, within a certain taxonomic group, or in the entire biosphere.
Biodiversity is seen as important to the sustainability of life in general and as an all-round Good Thing.[1] Having various options of "life support systems" often means that, when conditions change, they are unlikely to all fail at once.[2]
Environmentalists regard human-caused ("anthropogenic") loss of biodiversity as a serious problem. Some branches of environmental philosophy give intrinsic value to biodiversity, and consider its conservation important beyond ecological services for humans.[3]
It is difficult to measure biodiversity, but with closer observation, one can simply see how diverse even a single ecosystem is. A single drop of pond water has several species of microscopic animals (from copepods to water fleas to rotifers), and other microorganisms (amoebas, paramecium, diatoms, and euglena). More complex information-based methods must decide when to describe genetic diversity versus diversity based on phenotypes and genotypes, which require more definitions of measurements themselves. Meaningful diversity-indices also take into take into account the total number of individuals of each species, and apply statistical measures.[4][5][6]