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  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Gettysburg_College/01%3A_Ecology_for_All/22%3A_Biodiversity/22.02%3A_Diversity_Indices
    where n i is the number of individuals in species i, N = total number of individuals of all species, and n i /N = p i (proportion of individuals of species i), and S = species richness. Alpha diversit...where n i is the number of individuals in species i, N = total number of individuals of all species, and n i /N = p i (proportion of individuals of species i), and S = species richness. Alpha diversity (or species richness), the most commonly referenced measure of species diversity, refers to the total number of species found in a particular biological community, such as a lake or a forest.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Gettysburg_College/02%3A_Principles_of_Ecology_-_Gettysburg_College_ES_211/05%3A_Biodiversity/5.03%3A_Species_Diversity/5.3.01%3A_Alpha_Beta_and_Gamma_Diversity
    For example, the beta diversity between the woodland and the hedgerow habitats is 7 (representing the 5 species found in the woodland but not the hedgerow, plus the 2 species found in the hedgerow but...For example, the beta diversity between the woodland and the hedgerow habitats is 7 (representing the 5 species found in the woodland but not the hedgerow, plus the 2 species found in the hedgerow but not the woodland).
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Gettysburg_College/01%3A_Ecology_for_All/18%3A_Ecological_Succession/18.03%3A_Patterns_of_Diversity_Following_Disturbance
    Disturbance typically increases diversity at the landscape scale, but intense disturbances can initially decrease diversity at the site scale. This scale-dependent process can be described with differ...Disturbance typically increases diversity at the landscape scale, but intense disturbances can initially decrease diversity at the site scale. This scale-dependent process can be described with different diversity metrics, some of which we will explore in this chapter; others will be introduced later.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Workbench/General_Ecology_Ecology/Chapter_18%3A_Ecological_Succession/18.3%3A_Patterns_of_Diversity_Following_Disturbance
    Disturbance typically increases diversity at the landscape scale, but intense disturbances can initially decrease diversity at the site scale. This scale-dependent process can be described with differ...Disturbance typically increases diversity at the landscape scale, but intense disturbances can initially decrease diversity at the site scale. This scale-dependent process can be described with different diversity metrics, some of which we will explore in this chapter; others will be introduced later.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Workbench/General_Ecology_Ecology/Chapter_22%3A_Biodiversity/22.5%3A_Measuring_Biodiveristy
    where n i is the number of individuals in species i, N = total number of individuals of all species, and n i /N = p i (proportion of individuals of species i), and S = species richness. Alpha diversit...where n i is the number of individuals in species i, N = total number of individuals of all species, and n i /N = p i (proportion of individuals of species i), and S = species richness. Alpha diversity (or species richness), the most commonly referenced measure of species diversity, refers to the total number of species found in a particular biological community, such as a lake or a forest.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Ecology/Biodiversity_(Bynum)/7%3A_Alpha_Beta_and_Gamma_Diversity
    For example, the beta diversity between the woodland and the hedgerow habitats is 7 (representing the 5 species found in the woodland but not the hedgerow, plus the 2 species found in the hedgerow but...For example, the beta diversity between the woodland and the hedgerow habitats is 7 (representing the 5 species found in the woodland but not the hedgerow, plus the 2 species found in the hedgerow but not the woodland).

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