I think you’re right in general, you’re just pointing to a different thing than Deena is, so maybe tabooing “biodiversity” might be useful here. They’re at OP GHD so unsurprisingly the part of conservation loss they care about is human mortality impact.
We are orienting to this issue at the ‘local systems’ level (see below). We acknowledge that many organizations are tackling related issues at the earth systems level (climate change) and individual level (animal welfare). We feel there are important, tractable and neglected strategies that emerge when operating at this level.
This table visualizes the relationships between ecosystems and other aspects of our world and core systems we speak to throughout this proposal.
Quantifying species diversity is an interesting mathematical problem in its own right. Tom Leinster’s slides make the case that the three popular measures of species diversity (species richness, Shannon entropy, Gini–Simpson index) all problematically diverge from intuitively-desired behavior in edge cases of consequence, so the formalisation you really want is Hill numbers, which depend on a so-called “viewpoint parameter” q that changes how the former are sensitive to rare species. (Your professed stance corresponds to low q; it’d be useful to know if your interlocutors prefer high q; Tom’s charts visualise this.) You can then extend this line of reasoning in ways that affect actual conservation policy.
I think you’re right in general, you’re just pointing to a different thing than Deena is, so maybe tabooing “biodiversity” might be useful here. They’re at OP GHD so unsurprisingly the part of conservation loss they care about is human mortality impact.
A more biodiversity-as-you-said line of thinking fleshed out would probably look like this:
Quantifying species diversity is an interesting mathematical problem in its own right. Tom Leinster’s slides make the case that the three popular measures of species diversity (species richness, Shannon entropy, Gini–Simpson index) all problematically diverge from intuitively-desired behavior in edge cases of consequence, so the formalisation you really want is Hill numbers, which depend on a so-called “viewpoint parameter” q that changes how the former are sensitive to rare species. (Your professed stance corresponds to low q; it’d be useful to know if your interlocutors prefer high q; Tom’s charts visualise this.) You can then extend this line of reasoning in ways that affect actual conservation policy.