Introduction
One of the most common ESS questions students ask is: Do I really need to know case studies for biodiversity? The short answer is yes. In the 2026 syllabus, biodiversity case studies are essential for demonstrating applied understanding in both Paper 1 and Paper 2.
ESS examiners want more than textbook definitions—they reward students who can connect biodiversity concepts to real-world examples. Strong case studies show that you understand not only the science but also the social, economic, and ethical dimensions of biodiversity.
Quick Start Checklist: Case Studies for Biodiversity
- At least two global biodiversity case studies.
- At least one local case study (from your country or region).
- Cover different biomes and ecosystems (rainforest, coral reefs, tundra, wetlands, etc.).
- Include causes of biodiversity loss, human impacts, and conservation strategies.
- Practice applying case studies to different types of exam questions.
Why Case Studies Are Essential in ESS
Biodiversity is a systems-thinking topic—it connects ecology, human activity, conservation, and ethics. Case studies allow you to:
- Provide evidence to support explanations.
- Show awareness of scale (local vs global).
- Evaluate conservation strategies with real-world outcomes.
- Avoid vague answers, which examiners penalize.
Without case studies, your answers risk sounding generic and losing marks in higher-level assessment bands.
