Why Biodiversity Matters - Our Quality of Life
Return to Sustaining Our Living Wealth contents
| Biodiversity underpins human well-being in many ways. We depend on the environment to supply clean air to breathe and clean water to drink, to produce and maintain fertile soils and to break down our wastes. Biological resources provide all of our foods, many of our medicines and many of our industrial products. Moreover, they provide us with recreation, inspiration and a cultural identity. | ![]() |
Our biological diversity is also a source of pleasure.
Many Victorians simply wish to know such diversity exists and that it is protected. For others, our biodiversity offers more direct enjoyment. Bird-watching in the Mallee, snorkelling over sheltered reefs, walking in the ancient rainforests of East Gippsland, and recreation in national parks and state forests throughout Victoria are everyday examples of biodiversity enriching our lives.
In addition, many of our natural resources spring from biodiversity. For example, our forests generate about $3000 million in commercial turnover each year.
Our seas and rivers support substantial recreational and commercial fisheries, with Victoria’s commercial fisheries (including aquaculture) worth around $100 million per year. Agriculture too depends on biodiversity – for watershed protection, climate regulation, soil fertility, nutrient storage and cycling, and so on. Without it, this $5000 million per year sector would be threatened.
Beyond all this, the environment is something more than a commodity for our benefit. We share the Earth with many other life-forms that have their own intrinsic value. They warrant our respect, whether or not they are of immediate benefit to us.


