Species diversity is the number of different species that are represented in a given community (a dataset). The effective number of species refers to the number of equally abundant species needed to obtain the same mean proportional species abundance as that observed in the dataset of interest (where all species may not be equally abundant). Species diversity consists of two components:
species richness and
species evenness.
Species richness is a simple count of species, whereas species evenness quantifies how equal the
abundances of the species are.