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Sustainability

Biodiversity

Biodiversity is the term used to describe the variety and variability of life on earth.

Healthy biodiversity is essential for life on earth

Biodiversity can be categorised by three specific levels:

  • Genetic Diversity: the variety of genes, or genetic information within a species
  • Species Diversity: the number, or abundance of living things within a particular area
  • Ecosystem Diversity: the number of habitats found in a region.

Healthy biodiversity is essential for maintaining the systems and processes that make life possible. Take for example the air we breathe or soil which grows our food – both of which are dependent on processes including the water, nitrogen and carbon cycles. All of these cycles are dependent on healthy biodiversity to function.

As humans we need to remember that we are both part of biodiversity and dependent on a healthy, biodiverse planet to maintain our way of life.

Development and the increased modernisation of our lives have caused an alarming decrease in biodiversity worldwide. There are a number of human activities which are responsible for this, including:

• Overexploitation;
• Land use change/ habitat destruction
• Introduction of invasive species
• Pollution to air, land and water; and
• Climate change.

A culmination of these factors is leading to significant overall declines to biodiversity globally. The WWF estimates that populations have declined by an average of 69% in the last 50 years.

Biodiversity In Ireland

From seaweed to oak trees, Ireland has some amazing biodiversity. Watch this video from Donegal Council to find out more about biodiversity in Ireland.

Biodiversity In Ireland

Enhancing biodiversity on site

Biodiversity enhancement isn’t limited to new developments. Bear in mind most of our built environment is here already! Refurbishment and maintenance scheduling for the existing built environment can significantly influence biodiversity. By incorporating ecological features and management regimes, spaces can be improved to provide habitats for wildlife whilst improving user experiences and contributing to our wellbeing.

Initiatives can include;

  • Green roofs
  • Living walls
  • Bird/bat boxes
  • Bird feeders
  • Planting low-maintenance native species on site
  • Ponds and water features
  • Planting butterfly/bee-friendly species on site
  • “Bug hotels” and beehives
  • Even investigating opportunities for species reintroductions

Topics related to biodiversity

Biodiversity is crucial to the built environment and we'd encourage you to take a look at these other interrelated topics within the School's library.

Topic
Air Quality

The quality of the air we all breathe often gets…

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Topic
Community & Social Impact

How companies in the built environment interact with the communities…

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Topic
Energy and Carbon

Climate change is the biggest issue of our time and…

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Topic
Water

Monitoring and addressing water consumption and use helps to reduce…

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Topic
Wellbeing

The built environment presents a myriad of wellbeing challenges that…

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Key biodiversity resources

Here are a selection of featured biodiversity resources. To view more, please visit our full resource library:

Sustainability
Biodiversity
Sustainability
Sustainability
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