What is Biodiversity?
The term biodiversity refers to the enormous diversity of all life on earth and is often categorised into three classifications - ecosystem diversity, species diversity and genetic diversity. From the smallest single celled microbe to the world’s largest animal, the blue whale, biodiversity encompasses every living thing that exists on our planet and the environments in which they live. Biodiversity is an intricate, interdependent web on which all life depends and includes ecosystems as different as ocean floors, alpine peaks and temperate rainforests.
Australia is home to nearly 700,000 different species, many of which are found nowhere else in the world. Around 84% of our plants, 83% of our mammals, and 45% of our birds are endemic - or found only in Australia. Consequently Australia is considered the most biodiversity rich developed nation in the world. Tasmania has over 50 species of mammal, more than 250 resident and migratory bird species and 2400 native plants, of which 20% are endemic. There are 25 species of native fish and an estimated 35,000 land-based invertebrate species.









