Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion...

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Community Ecology Chapter 54

Transcript of Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion...

Page 1: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Community EcologyChapter 54

Page 2: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Interspecific Interactions• Competition --/--• Competitive exclusion• Ecological Niches (Habitat-address;

niche-profession)• Resource partitioning-allows similar

species to coexist in a community• Fundamental niche-potential• Realized niche-actual-may be result

of interspecific competition

Page 3: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Character Displacement• Tendency for characteristics to

diverge more in sympatric pop of 2 species than in allopatric pop

Page 4: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Predation +/--• Can be animal eating plant tissues• Defensive adaptations

– Cryptic coloration

Page 5: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Aposematic coloration-warning

Page 6: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Batesian mimicry-harmless or palative looks bad

Page 7: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Mullerian mimicry• 2 unpalatable species look alike

Page 8: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Herbivory +/--

Plants have chemical toxins, spines, thorns

ex strychnine, nicotine, selenium toxinsHerbivores-special adaptations

– Insect-chemical sensors– Sense of smell– Specialized teeth– Length of digestive systems

Page 9: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Symbiosis• Parasitism +/--• Mutualism +/+ obligate; facultative• Commensalism +/0

Page 10: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Facilitation• Species can have positive effects on

the survival and reproduction of another species without living in direct or intimate contact.

• Ex. Juncus grows in salt marshes and prevents salt buildup-benefits other species

Page 11: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Species Diversity• Species richness• Relative abundance

Page 12: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Shannon diversity (H)• Index based on species richness and

relative abundance

Page 13: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Trophic structure• Food Chain

Page 14: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Food Webs (Elton 1920s)

Page 15: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Limits on length of foodchain

• Energetic hypothesis-inefficiency of energy transfer -10% rule

• Dynamic stability hypothesis-long food chains are less stable than short ones-population fluctuations at lower trophic levels are magnified at higher levels

• Also-carnivores tend to be larger at successive trophic levels-can’t get enough food to meet needs

Page 16: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Dominant species• Most abundant-have the highest

biomass• Exert a powerful control• Are they are competitively superior in

exploiting limited resources?• Are they are most successful at

avoiding predation?-would explain effect of invasive species…

Page 17: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Invasive pressure• American Chestnut• Before 1910-40% of US trees-fungal disease-Chestnut blight-killed all the trees-oak, hickoryreplaced; mammals, birdsok, but 7 species of moths and butterfliesbecame extinct

Page 18: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Keystone species• Sea otters: Sea otters are a keystone species in the kelp

forests. They eat many invertebrates, but especially sea urchins. If there are too many sea urchins, they will eat too much of the kelp and destroy it.

Page 19: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

• Elephants: By eating small trees, elephants preserve the grasslands, because the grasses need plenty of sun to survive. If they were not there, the savanna would convert to a forest or scrublands.

• Grizzly bears: As predators, bears keep down the numbers of several species, like moose and elk. They also carry and deposit seeds throughout the ecosystem. Bears that eat salmon will leave their dropping and the partially eaten remains that provide nutrients such as sulfur, nitrogen and carbon to the soil.

Page 20: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Foundation species• Ecosystem “engineers”• Affect by causing physical changes in

the environment• Ex beavers• Facilitators-may help other species

Page 21: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Models of organization• Bottom up VH increase of veg-more

H• NVHP• Top down VH increase in H- less V• NVHP Trophic Cascade (ex.

Remove top carnivoresprimary carnivores so upherbivores decreasephytoplankton goes upnutrients go down) (Manipulate +/- effect

Biomanipulation-prevent algal blooms by adding consumers rather than chemicals

Page 22: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Disturbance• Influences species diversity and

composition• Storms, waves, fires, freezing,

drought, • Moderate disturbance can foster

greater diversity than low or high levels

Page 23: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Ecological succession• Species are replaced by other species• Primary• Secondary• Climax community

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Page 25: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Island Biogeography• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2R

avt4AqdZI

Page 26: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Island Equilibrium Model

Page 27: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Latitudinal gradients• Species richness increases as

approach tropics• Tropics-older; others have repeatedly

started over (glaciers retreating, etc)• Growing season longer• Sunlight and precipitation higher• Evapotranspiration-evap of water for

soil and plants together

Page 28: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

• Zoonotic pathogens: transferred to humans from other animals (vector)

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Detritivores• Return nutrients to the soil• Law of conservation of mass

Page 30: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Aquatic Ecosystem• Light limitation• Nutrient limitation• Eutrophication

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Biomass-dry mass• *

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• *In inverted pyramid, phytoplankton grow, reproduce, and are consumed so quickly by the zooplankton that they never develop a large population size, or standing crop

Page 33: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

• Phytoplankton continually replace their biomass at such a rapid rate, they can support a biomass of zooplankton bigger than their own biomass.

Page 34: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

The Green World Hypothesis

• Terrestrial herbivores are held in check by a variety of factors.– Mechanical defenses– Chemicals

– Low nutrient concentrations so must consume large quantities

– Abiotic factors-temp & moisture extremes

– Competition

Page 35: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Productivity• GPP-gross primary production• NPP-net primary production• NPP=GPP – R(autotrophic respiration)• Primary production

– in aquatic is mostly affected by light and nutrients-N and P

– Eutrophic-nutrient rich; oligotrophic-nutrient poor

– On land-temp and water– evotranspiration

Page 36: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Biogeochemical cycles

Page 37: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Nitrogen cycle

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Additional Terms• Bioremediation-use of organisms to

detoxify polluted areas• Bioaugmentation-add desirable

species such as nitrogen fixers• Biodiversity (3 Levels)-genetic

diversity, species diversity and ecosystem diversity

• Threats: habitat loss, introduced species, over-harvesting, global change

Page 39: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Population conservation• Focuses on:

– Population size– Genetic diversity– Critical habitat

Page 40: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

MVP• Minimum Viable Population• Extinction Vortex

Page 41: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Landscape and regional conservation

• Habitat fragmentation• Movement corridors• Biodiversity hot spot-small area with

an exceptional concentration of endemic species

Page 42: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

Human Actions• Agriculture-nutrient cycling-take it

out of soil or too much in water• Acid precipitation• Biological magnification• Greenhouse effect• Global warming• Ozone layer

Page 43: Community Ecology Chapter 54. Interspecific Interactions Competition --/-- Competitive exclusion Ecological Niches (Habitat-address; niche- profession)

• BIDE birth immigration death emigration

• Additive growth• Multiplicative growth

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