Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control Chapter 5.
Transcript of Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control Chapter 5.
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Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control
Chapter 5
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Core Case Study: Southern Sea Otters: Are They Back from the Brink of Extinction?
Habitat Hunted: early 1900s Partial recovery
Why care
about sea otters?• Ethics• Keystone
species• Tourism dollars
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Case Study: Sea Otters Are They Back From the Brink of Extinction
(a) Southern sea otter (b) Sea Urchin (c) Kelp bed
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5-1 How Do Species Interact?
Concept 5-1 Five types of species interactions—competition, predation, parasitism, mutualism, and commensalism—affect the resource use and population sizes of the species in an ecosystem.
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Most Species Compete with One Another for Certain Resources
Competition the struggle among organisms, both of the same and of different species, for food, space, and other vital requirements.
Competitive exclusion principle The principle that when two species compete for the same critical resources within an environment, one of them will eventually outcompete and displace the other. The displaced species may become locally extinct, by either migration or death, or it may adapt to a sufficiently distinct niche within the environment so that it continues to coexist noncompetitively with the displacing species.
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Species Interact in Five Major Ways
Interspecific Competition
Predation
Parasitism
Mutualism
Commensalism
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Interspecific competition• Competition between two
different species• For food, sunlight, water, soil,
space• One species may migrate or
shift feeding habits or face extinction
• Example-native ants and nonnative fire ants
Intraspecific competition• competition between
members of the same species
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Most Consumer Species Feed on Live Organisms of Other Species
Predators may capture prey by• Pursuit
• Walking• Swimming• Flying
• Pursuit and ambush• Camouflage• Chemical warfare
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PREDATION
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Most Consumer Species Feed on Live Organisms of Other Species
Prey may avoid capture by• Camouflage• Chemical warfare• Warning coloration• Mimicry• Deceptive looks• Deceptive behavior• Swift movement• Shell
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Span worm Bombardier beetle
Viceroy butterfly mimicsmonarch butterfly
Foul-tasting monarch butterfly
Poison dart frog When touched, the snake caterpillar changes shape to look like the head of a snake
Some ways prey species avoid their prey
Wandering leaf insect
Hind wings of mothresemble eyes of a much larger animal
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Parasitism, Mutualism, Commensalism
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Parasitism
• Live on or in another species• Host is harmed
• Ex. Tapeworms, ticks, fleas, mosquitoes, candiru (vampire fish)
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Mutualism (benefits both species)
• Pollination mutualism (between flowering plants and animals)
• Nutritional mutualism• Lichens grow on trees• Birds/rhinos- nutrition and
protection• Clownfish/sea anemones• Inhabitant mutualism• Vast amount of organisms like
bacteria in an animal’s digestive tract
• Termites and bacteria in gut
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Coral Reefs- The corals get food and the
zooxanthellae (algae) get protection.
.
zooxanthellae
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Yucca’s only pollinator is the yucca moth. Hence entirely dependent on it for dispersal.
Yucca moth caterpillar’s only food is yucca seeds.
Yucca moth lives in yucca and receives shelter from plant.
Example of co evolution
Yucca and Yucca Moth
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Figure 8-10Page 155
Oxpeckers and black rhinoceros Clown fish and sea anemone
Mycorrhizae fungi on juniper seedlings in normal soil
Lack of mycorrhizae fungi on juniper seedlings in sterilized soil
Examples of Mutualism
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Commensalism• Helps one species but
does nothing for the other
Ex. Redwood sorrel grows in shade of redwood
- Humans and Eyelash Mites
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Science Focus: Why Should We Care about Kelp Forests?
Kelp forests: biologically diverse marine habitat
Major threats to kelp forests• Sea urchins• Pollution from
water run-off• Global warming
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5-2 How Can Natural Selection Reduce Competition between Species?
Concept 5-2 Some species develop adaptations that allow them to reduce or avoid competition with other species for resources.
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Some Species Evolve Ways to Share Resources
Resource partitioning
Reduce niche overlap
Use shared resources at different• Times• Places• Ways
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Resource partitioning
• Evolve more specialized traits
Five species of common insect-eating warblers in the Spruce forests of Maine
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5-3 What Limits the Growth of Populations?
Concept 5-3 No population can continue to grow indefinitely because of limitations on resources and because of competition among species for those resources.
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Characteristics of a PopulationCharacteristics of a Population
Population - individuals inhabiting the same area at the same time
Population Dynamics: is the study of how population change due to• Population Size - number of individuals• Population Density - population size in a certain
space at a given time• Population Dispersion - spatial pattern in habitat• Age distribution - proportion of individuals in each
age group in population
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Populations Have Certain Characteristics
Changes in population characteristics due to:• Temperature• Presence of disease organisms or harmful
chemicals• Resource availability• Arrival or disappearance of competing species
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Population SizePopulation Size
Natality• Number of individuals added through reproduction• Crude Birth Rate - Births per 1000• Total Fertility Rate – Average number of children
born alive per woman in her lifetime
Mortality• Number of individuals removed through death• Crude Death Rate- Deaths per 1000
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Population DensityPopulation Density
Population Density (or ecological population density) is the amount of individuals in a population per unit habitat area• Some species exist in high densities - Mice• Some species exist in low densities - Mountain
lions
Density depends upon• social/population structure• mating relationships• time of year
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Population DispersionPopulation DispersionPopulation dispersion is the spatial pattern of distribution
There are three main classifications
Clumped: individuals are lumped into groups ex. Flocking birds or herbivore herds due to resources that are clumped or social interactions most common http://www.johndarm.clara.net/galleryphots/
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Most Populations Live Together in Clumps or Patches
Why clumping?• Species tend to cluster where resources are
available• Groups have a better chance of finding clumped
resources• Protects some animals from predators• Packs allow some to get prey• Temporary groups for mating and caring for
young
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Population DispersionPopulation Dispersion
Uniform: Individuals are regularly spaced in the environment - ex. Creosote bush due to antagonism between individuals, or do to regular spacing of resources rare because resources are rarely evenly spaced
http://www.calflora.net/bloomingplants/creosotebush2.html
www.agry.purdue.edu/turf/ tips/2002/clover611.htm
Random: Individuals are randomly dispersed in the environment ex. Dandelions due to random distribution of resources in the environment, and neither positive nor negative interaction between individuals rare because these conditions are rarely met
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Age StructureAge Structure The age structure of a population is usually
shown graphically The population is usually divided up into
prereproductives, reproductives and postreproductives
The age structure of a population dictates whether is will grow, shrink, or stay the same size
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Age Structure DiagramsAge Structure Diagrams
Positive Growth Zero Growth Negative Growth (ZPG)Pyramid Shape Vertical Edges Inverted Pyramid
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Four variables influencing growth• Births• Deaths• Immigration• Emigration
Increase by birth & immigration Decrease death & emigration
Population change= (Birth + Immigration)-
(Death + Emigration)
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No Population Can Grow Indefinitely: J-Curves and S-Curves (1)
Biotic potential - is the population’s capacity for growth • Low generally large animals elephant and blue whales
• High small individuals like bacteria and insects
Intrinsic rate of increase (r) is the rate of population growth with unlimited resources.
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Rapidly growing populations have four characteristics (high r)
• Reproduction early in life• Short periods between generations• Long reproductive lives• Multiple offspring each time they reproduce
• A single house fly could
total 5.6 trillion house flies
within 13 months
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No Population Can Grow Indefinitely: J-Curves and S-Curves (2)
Size of populations limited by• Light• Water• Space• Nutrients• Exposure to too many competitors, predators or
infectious diseases
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Environmental ResistanceEnvironmental Resistance
Consists of all factors that act to limit the growth of a population• Abiotic Contributing Factors:
• Unfavorable light• Unfavorable Temperatures• Unfavorable chemical environment - nutrients
• Biotic Contributing Factors:• Low reproductive rate• Specialized niche• Inability to migrate or disperse• Inadequate defense mechanisms• Inability to cope with adverse conditions
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Limits on population growth
• Carrying capacity [K] determined by biotic potential & environmental resistance
• This is the # of a species’ individuals that can be sustained indefinitely in a specific space
• As a population reaches its carrying capacity, its growth rate will decrease because resources become more scarce.
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Population GrowthPopulation Growth Populations show two types of growth
• With few resource limitations• Exponential
• J-shaped curve• Growth is independent of population density
• The growth rate levels off as population reaches carrying capacity • Logistic
• S-shaped curve• Growth is not independent of population density
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Science Focus: Why Are Protected Sea Otters Making a Slow Comeback?
Low biotic potential
Prey for orcas
Cat parasites
Toxic algae blooms
PCBs and other toxins
Oil spills
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When a Population Exceeds Its Habitat’s Carrying Capacity, Its Population Can Crash
Carrying capacity: not fixed
Reproductive time lag may lead to overshoot• Dieback (crash)
Damage may reduce area’s carrying capacity
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Exponential growth, overshoot, and population crash of reindeer introduced to a small island off of SW Alaska
Carryingcapacity
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Populationcrashes
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Reproductive StrategiesReproductive Strategies Goal of every species is to produce as
many offspring as possible Each individual has a limited amount of
energy to put towards life and reproduction This leads to a trade-off of long life or high
reproductive rate Natural Selection has lead to two strategies
for species: r - strategists and K - strategists
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r - Strategistsr - Strategists Spend most of their
time in exponential growth
High rate of reproduction
Little parental care Minimum life Opportunist
K
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R StrategistsR Strategists
Many small offspring Little or no parental care and protection of offspring Early reproductive age Most offspring die before reaching reproductive age Small adults Adapted to unstable climate and environmental
conditions High population growth rate – (r) Population size fluctuates wildly above and below
carrying capacity – (K) Generalist niche Low ability to compete Early successional species
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K - StrategistsK - Strategists
Maintain population at carrying capacity (K)
Maximize lifespan Competitor Follow a logistic
growth curve
K
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K- StrategistK- Strategist
Reproduce later in life Fewer, larger offspring High parental care and protection of offspring Most offspring survive to reproductive age Larger adults Adapted to stable climate and environmental
conditions Lower population growth rate (r) Population size fairly stable and usually close to
carrying capacity (K) Specialist niche High ability to compete Late successional species Prone to extinction
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Genetic Diversity Can Affect the Size of Small Populations
Founder effect
Demographic bottleneck
Genetic drift
Inbreeding
Minimum viable population size- the number of individuals populations need for long term survival
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Effects of Genetic Variations on Population Size
Genetic diversity• 1. Founder effect
• Few individuals move to a new location and are isolated from the original population
• Limited genetic
diversity
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• 2. Demographic bottleneck• Few individuals survive a catastrophe- fire,
hurricane• Lack of genetic diversity may limit these
individuals to rebuild the population
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• 3. Genetic drift• Random changes in gene
frequencies • May help or hurt survival of a
population• Some individuals may breed
more than others and their
genes may eventually dominate the gene pool of the population
• 4. Inbreeding• Members of a small population
exchange genes
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Density of a population density
Density-independent (affects population size regardless of its density)• Floods, hurricanes, fire, pesticide spraying ,
pollution) Density-dependent (greater effect as population
density increases)• Competition for resources, predation, parasitism,
disease – bubonic plague)
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Population fluctuations in nature
Stable (varies slightly above and below carrying capacity,K)
Irruptive (explode to a high level and then drastically drop - insects)
Cyclic (over a regular time period – lemmings populations rise and fall ever 3-4 years)
Irregular behavior (no pattern)
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© 2004 Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning
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General types of simplified population changes curves found in nature
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Year
Hare
Lynx
Predator – prey relationships Lynx-Hare Cycle Cyclic ever 10 years
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Humans Are Not Exempt from Nature’s Population Controls
Ireland• Potato crop in 1845• 1 million people died from hunger or disease form malnutrition• 3 million migrated to other countries (mainly U.S.)
Bubonic plague• Fourteenth century• Killed a least 25 million people in European Cities
AIDS• Global epidemic• Between 1981- 2007 AIDS has killed more than 25 million
people• Claims 2.1 million a year ( average of 4 deaths per min.)
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Case Study: Exploding White-Tailed Deer Population in the U.S.
1900: deer habitat destruction and uncontrolled hunting
1920s–1930s: laws to protect the deer
Current population explosion for deer• Lyme disease• Deer-vehicle accidents• Eating garden plants and shrubs
Ways to control the deer population
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5-4 How Do Communities and Ecosystems Respond to Changing Environmental Conditions?
Concept 5-4 The structure and species composition of communities and ecosystems change in response to changing environmental conditions through a process called ecological succession.
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Communities and Ecosystems Change over Time: Ecological Succession
Natural ecological restoration• Primary succession is ecological succession in a
bare area that has never been occupied by a community of organisms.
• Bare rock exposed by retreating glacier, severe erosion, newly cooled lava, abandoned concrete/ highway, newly created pond
• Secondary succession is an ecological succession in an area in which natural vegetation has been removed or destroyed but the soil is not destroyed.
• forest fires, deforestation, abandoned farmland, heavily polluted streams, and land that has been damned or flooded.
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Succession = change
• 1. Primary succession• Gradual establishment of biotic community on lifeless
ground• Barren habitat
• Bare rock / retreating glacier• A newly- cooled lava• A newly formed pond
• It takes several centuries to several thousands of years for natural processes to produce fertile soil.
• Ex. Hawaii• Pioneer species (lichens, moss and microbes)
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Some Ecosystems Start from Scratch: Primary Succession
No soil in a terrestrial system No bottom sediment in an aquatic system Early successional plant species, pioneer
• Bacteria, moss, lichens
Midsuccessional plant species• Herbs and shrubs
Late successional plant species• Balsam fir, paper birch, and white spruce
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Primary Succession
Glacier Retreat
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Time
Small herbsand shrubs
Heath mat
Jack pine,black spruce,
and aspen
Balsam fir,paper birch, and
white spruceclimax community
Exposedrocks
Lichensand mosses
Primary Succession
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Some Ecosystems Do Not Have to Start from Scratch: Secondary Succession
Some soil remains in a terrestrial system
Some bottom sediment remains in an aquatic system
Ecosystem has been• Disturbed• Removed• Destroyed
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Time
Annualweeds
Perennialweeds and
grasses
ShrubsYoung pine forest
Mature oak-hickory forest
Secondary Succession
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Some Ecosystems Do Not Have to Start from Scratch: Secondary Succession (2)
Primary and secondary succession• Tend to increase biodiversity• Increase species richness and interactions
among species
Primary and secondary succession can be interrupted by• Fires• Hurricanes• Clear-cutting of forests• Plowing of grasslands• Invasion by nonnative species
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Succession of an Aquatic Ecosystem
Aquatic ecosystem gradually increasing in sedimentation/inflow of nutrients from surrounding land areas
Slowly filling w/ silt, sand and other particles; shoreline gradually advances toward the center of the pond;
Aquatic vegetation contributing to this filling In a “classic scenario” the pond would eventually
become a wetland, then perhaps a grassland, followed by some type of forest.
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Science Focus: How Do Species Replace One Another in Ecological Succession?
1. Facilitation• One species makes an area of suitable for
another species• Ex. Moss build land for grasses
2. Inhibition• Early species limit later species• Ex. Plants may release toxins
3. Tolerance• Later species are unaffected by earlier
species
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Succession Doesn’t Follow a Predictable Path
Traditional view • Balance of nature and a climax community
Current view • Ever-changing mosaic of patches of vegetation• Mature late-successional ecosystems
• State of continual disturbance and change
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Living Systems Are Sustained through Constant Change
Inertia, persistence• Ability of a living system to survive moderate
disturbances Resilience
• Ability of a living system to be restored through secondary succession after a moderate disturbance
Tipping point• Where any additional stress can cause the
system to change in an abrupt and usually irreversible way
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The Cats of Borneo
What happened first?
Arrange the sentence strips in chronological order
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Operation Cat Drop
One of the most bizarre events to accompany this early use of DDT occurred when it became necessary to parachute cats into remote jungle villages in what was then Burma. The following account was taken from a source at Cornell University:
In the early 1950s, the Dayak people in Borneo suffered from malaria. The World Health Organization had a solution: they sprayed large amounts of DDT to kill the mosquitoes which carried the malaria. The mosquitoes died, the malaria declined; so far, so good. But there were side-effects. Among the first was that the roofs of people's houses began to fall down on their heads. It seemed that the DDT was also killing a parasitic wasp which had previously controlled thatch-eating caterpillars. Worse, the DDT-poisoned insects were eaten by geckoes, which were eaten by cats. The cats started to die, the rats flourished, and the people were threatened by outbreaks of sylvatic plague and typhus. To cope with these problems, which it had itself created, the World Health Organization was obliged to parachute14,000 live cats into Borneo.
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The Day they Parachuted Cats into Borneo
WHO sent DDT to Borneo. Mosquitoes were wiped out. Caterpillar numbers went up. Caterpillars ate grass roofs. Roaches stored DDT in their bodies. Lizards ate roaches and got DDT. Lizards slowed down. Cats caught lizards containing DDT. Lizards disappeared. Cats died. Rats increased. Rats brought the plague. Cats were parachuted in.