The study of biodiversity can be divided into two major aspects. One aspect is concerned with the numbers of species, genera, families, or other taxonomic units that are present within a given group of organisms, or a given region, or during a given period of time. This measure of diversity is termed richness. Richness may be represented at any geographic scale: local, such as the number of species in your backyard; regional, such as the number of species found in California; or global, such as the number of species in the entire world at present. Preservation of species richness in the present biosphere is clearly a matter of great social and scientific concern. Each species has a unique genetic makeup, and a distinctive place within an ecosystem. If a species is lost, the unique genes are also lost, and the effects on the ecosystem can be destabilizing, affecting the well-being of still other species.