travismulthaupt.com chapter 53 community ecology

70
travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

Upload: giles-melton

Post on 01-Jan-2016

217 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Chapter 53

Community Ecology

Page 2: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

A Community

A community is all of the species within a given area that have the ability to interact with one another and their environment.

Community structure is chiefly governed by the interactions of the organisms and their environments.

Page 3: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Interspecific Interactions

Interspecific interactions are the relationships in the life cycles of the organisms and their interactions with other species in the community.

Page 4: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Possible Linking Interactions:1. Competition

2. Predation

3. Herbivory

4. Symbiosis• Parasitism, • Mutualism, • Commensalism

Page 5: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Interspecific Competition

Occurs when species compete for a particular resource that is limited in some way.

When both organisms compete for it, it may be detrimental to one or both organisms and may lead to competitive exclusion.

Page 6: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Competitive Exclusion

Occurs when one organism has a means to use a resource better than another.

Thus, it is better able to reproduce and ultimately leads to the elimination of the the other organism.

Page 7: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

G.F. Gause

Arrived at the Principle of Competitive Exclusion while studying 2 species of paramecium.

Each would grow well on their own--reaching a carrying capacity.

When grown together, one would drive the other to extinction.

Page 8: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Niche

This is a species role in the environment--where and how it fits into an ecosystem.

A species ecological niche is the sum total of all biotic and abiotic resources available to an organism within an environment.

Page 9: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Niche

In terms of the Competitive Exclusion Principle, two species cannot coexist in an ecosystem if their niches are identical.

Page 10: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Niche

Similar species can coexist if they are in a community where there are one or more significant differences in their niches.

Page 11: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

NicheAs a result of competition, a species may occupy a realized niche rather than a fundamental niche.– Fundamental niche is the entire geographic

range suitable to a particular organism.– Realized niche is the part of the

fundamental niche actually occupied.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 12: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Resource Partitioning

As a direct result of competition, 2 organisms may evolve the capacity to use a different set of resources.– This enables 2 competing species to

coexist.

Page 13: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Character Displacement

A comparison of 2 closely related species whose populations overlap.– They may be allopatric or sympatric

species.

Page 14: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Character Displacement

In some cases, allopatric populations have similar morphology and use similar resources.

Page 15: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Character Displacement

In contrast, sympatric populations compete for resources and show differences in body structure and the resources they use.

Page 16: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Character DisplacementThus, character displacement is the tendency for characteristics to be more divergent in sympatric populations and convergent in allopatric populations as a result of competition.

Page 17: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Predation

Predators kill things.– They have acute senses and many

adaptations.• Claws, fangs, teeth, etc.

They have to have these adaptations because they are chasing prey that are often fast and agile, or bigger and stronger.

Page 18: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Prey

They have evolved many adaptations to avoid being caught.– Hiding, fleeing, self-defense, alarm calls.

They have morphological and physiological adaptations.– Cryptic coloration, mechanical and

chemical defenses.

Page 19: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Page 20: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Page 21: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Aposematic ColorationMany times animals with effective chemical defenses have bright warning coloration--aposematic coloration.– It is likely adaptive.– Evidence supports the

adaptive idea.

Predators often avoid prey with bright coloration.

Page 22: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Mimicry

This occurs when one species mimics another for some benefit.– There are two types:

• 1. Batesian• 2. Müllerian

Page 23: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

1. Batesian MimicryThis is where a non-poisonous species tricks (baits) a potential predator into thinking that it is poisonous.They mimic the appearance of a poisonous species.

Page 24: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

2. Müllerian Mimicry

Two or more poisonous species resemble one another.

When the prey mimic one another, it is beneficial to both species because predators will quickly learn to avoid certain coloration patterns.

Page 25: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Convergent Evolution

Müllerian mimicry is a good example of convergent evolution because many different species have similar patterns of coloration.

Example: bees

Page 26: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

PredationPredation can take on many different forms.– Herbivory--eating of plants.– Parasitism--deriving nutrients from a host

with no benefit to the host.• Endoparasites, ectoparasites, parasitoidism

– Mutualism--symbiotic type of relationship.– Commensalism--two species interact, one

benefits and the other is neither harmed not benefits.

Page 27: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Predation

The interspecific interactions of the species result in selective forces such as those seen in coevolution and convergent evolution.

Page 28: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Interspecific Interactions

Interspecific interactions and adaptations that result in coevolution must result in a genetic change between two interacting species.

One species changes which results in a change in another species, which results in a change in the first species, etc.

Page 29: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Convergent Evolution

In contrast, when more than two species are involved, convergent evolution occurs.

We see this with aposematic coloration.

Changes occur in multiple species as a result of a selective force of a predator.

Page 30: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Community Structure

Community structure is governed by a few species.

They control composition, relative abundance and diversity among species.

Page 31: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

2 Fundamental Features of Community Structure

1. Species diversity

2. Feeding Relationships

Page 32: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

1. Species Diversity

The variety of different kinds of organisms that comprise a community.

There are 2 components:– A. Species richness– B. Relative abundance

Page 33: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

A. Species Richness

The number of different types of species in a community.– Correlates to rates of evapotranspiration--the

measure of evaporation of water from soil plus the transpiration of water from plants.

Page 34: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

B. Relative Abundance

The proportion of the total each species represents.

Page 35: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Consider 2 Communities:Community #1: – 25A, 25B, 25C, 25D

Community #2: – 80A, 5B, 5C, 10D

Each community has 4 species: – richness is the same.

Relative abundance is different.

Page 36: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

2. Feeding Relationships

The structure and dynamics of a community depend on the feeding relationships between organisms for the most part.

This makes up the trophic structure of the community.

Page 37: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Food Webs

They are very complex and many species weave in and out at different levels.

They are linked to food chains.

Page 38: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Food Chains

They are relatively short.– 1. The energetic hypothesis:

• The length is limited by the inefficiency of energy transfer.

– 2. The dynamic stability hypothesis:• Long food chains are less stable than short

ones.

Page 39: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Page 40: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

1. The Energetic Hypothesis

Most data supports this. – Only about 10% of the energy stored in

each trophic level is converted into organic matter of the next level.

Page 41: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

2. The Dynamic Stability Hypothesis

Wild fluctuations in smaller populations are magnified at higher levels.

In variable environments, top predators can have a difficult time adjusting with shocks to the food chain.

Page 42: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Species Impact

Certain species have a large impact on the structure of a community.– They are highly abundant.– They play a key role in community dynamics.

They can be classified as:– Dominant species– Keystone species– Foundation Species

Page 43: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Dominant Species

Most abundant--greatest biomass.

Control the distribution of other species.

There is no single explanation for why a species becomes dominant.– They outcompete other species for

resources.– They are successful at avoiding predation.

Page 44: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Keystone Species

Not the most abundant species.

Do exert a strong control--stems from niche.

Page 45: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Sea-Star--Mussel Example:

The mussel Mytilus californianus is a dominant species in the rocky intertidal community of western N. America.

They compete for space.

The sea star Pisaster ocharaceous preys on the mussel removing it and allows for other animals to move in.

Page 46: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Sea-Star--Mussel Example:

When the sea star is experimentally removed, the mussels dominate the area and diversity declines.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Copyright ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings. All rights reserved.

Page 47: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Sea-Star--Mussel Example:

Thus, the sea star acts as a keystone species and exerts an influence over the entire community.

Page 48: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Models Describing Trophic Levels

Useful for describing biological communities.– Bottom-Up model– Top-Down model– Numerous intermediate models.– Nonequilibrium model

Page 49: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Bottom-Up Model

Hypothesis that there is a unidirectional influence from lower to higher trophic levels.

Vegetation→Herbivore linkage.

Page 50: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Top-Down Model

The hypothesis is that predators control organization because they reduce the herbivore population.Nutrients←Vegetation←Herbivore←Predator

Page 51: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Intermediate Models

Many models between bottom-up and top-down are proposed.

The direction of flow in these models is also hypothesized to fluctuate from bottom-up and top-down over time.

Page 52: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Nonequilibrium Model

Originally, scientists used to think that communities were stable.

Now, it is obvious that communities change much more than they are stable.

This gave rise to the nonequilibrium model.

Page 53: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Nonequilibrium Model

Communities are in a constant state of change as a result of continued disturbances.– Disturbances: things that change a

community by altering its resources and/or organisms.

• Example: fires, floods, droughts

Page 54: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis

Suggests that moderate levels of disturbance can create conditions that foster species diversity.

It is supported by a broad range of studies from terrestrial and aquatic communities.

Page 55: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Ecological Succession

The process by which a disturbed area gets colonized by a variety of species.

These are gradually replaced by still other species.

Page 56: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Primary Succession

Occurs when the process begins in a “lifeless” area where soil has not yet formed.– Example: moraine, volcanic island.

• Prokaryotes are initially present• Mosses and lichens are the 1st organisms

large enough to see.

Page 57: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Primary Succession

As time passes, soil forms from weathering and the chemical breakdown and plants eventually become the main form of vegetation.

Page 58: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Secondary Succession

Occurs when existing communities become cleared by some disturbance and get repopulated with plants over time.

Page 59: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Succession

Mount St. Helens

Page 60: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Secondary Succession

There are three processes that link early and late arriving species:– 1. Early arrivals make the environment

more hospitable.• They facilitate the appearance of later species

by making the environment conducive to growth.

Page 61: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Secondary Succession

2. Early arrivals may inhibit the arrival of later species.– However, colonization by later plants

occurs in spite of the plants rather than because of them.

Page 62: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Secondary Succession

3. Early and late arrivals are independent of one another.– Early arrivals tolerate later species but

neither help nor hinder them.

Page 63: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Biodiversity

Is controlled by biogeographical features.

The location and size of the island are correlated to species biodiversity.

As Darwin and Wallace pointed out, life is more varied and abundant in some some parts of the world than in others.

Page 64: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

Equatorial-Polar Gradients

There are two key factors observed in equatorial-polar gradients:– Evolutionary history and climate.

Tropical regions are “older” than polar regions because their growing season is longer.Equatorial regions have tended to avoid major disturbances such as glaciation compared to temperate regions.

Page 65: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

The Island Equilibrium Model

Island biogeography provides a great way to study species.

The Island Equilibrium Model helps us study this.– Islands--both terrestrial islands and islands

in the water.

Page 66: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

The Island Equilibrium Model

Consider a newly formed island:– Species come from a

mainland.

2 factors determine the number of species on the island:– The rate of immigration and

the rate of extinction.

Page 67: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

The Island Equilibrium Model

2 physical features of the island affect immigration and extinction rates:– 1. Size.– 2. Distance from mainland.

Page 68: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

The Island Equilibrium Model

1. Size:

Small islands generally have low immigration rates.

Page 69: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

The Island Equilibrium Model2. Distance from the mainland:With 2 islands of the same size, the one closer to the mainland will have a higher immigration rate and a lower extinction rate.

Page 70: Travismulthaupt.com Chapter 53 Community Ecology

travismulthaupt.com

The Island Equilibrium Model

It is called the island equilibrium model because eventually extinction rates will equal the immigration rates.It is somewhat of an oversimplification.It can only be applied over short time periods and on small islands.Large islands are subject to a number of changes.