Community ecology Koala Conga Line….. Community- groups of interacting populations Can be...
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Transcript of Community ecology Koala Conga Line….. Community- groups of interacting populations Can be...
![Page 1: Community ecology Koala Conga Line….. Community- groups of interacting populations Can be potentially influenced by interactions with other organisms.](https://reader035.fdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022062423/5697bfab1a28abf838c9af57/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Community ecology
Koala Conga Line….
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Community- groups of interacting populations
• Can be potentially influenced by interactions with other organisms
• Primate behavior shaped by interactions with other primate species
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Some definitions
• Niche- a way to define the role an organism plays in its environment- multidimensional
• Sympatry- when two organisms share a habitat• Congeneric- within the same genus (taxonomic
category)
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When similar species share...
• One may go extinct
• There may be evidence of behavioral character displacement (when one species shifts its niche)
• Share if– Resources are not limited– There is an area where they don’t overlap
(physical and dietary)
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• Trophic structure chart (11.1- coursepak)– Example: plants eaten by hippo, hippo eaten by hyenas, hyenas eaten by lions, lions eaten by vultures. – Note trend in population size for each category– Primate/plant interactions at the bottom– Primate impact on leaf
biomass (1%) compared
to insects (15%)
Ways to look at community
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• Biomass of everything (coursepak- Fig 11.2)• Biomass of mammals (coursepak Fig 11.1)• Body weight representation (Robinson graph handout)
Ways to look at community
– Note- animals make up small part of community– mammals make up an even smaller part– Primates very small!
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• Guilds-animals that occupy similar niches (role played in environment)- use resources in similar ways despite being very different organisms.
• Figure 14.4 - Avian guilds (in coursepak) – Note differences between forests
– Note how partitioned
Ways to look at community
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Example 1- Howling monkeys and leaf cutter ants
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Ants and Howlers
• Both eat tremendous amount of leaves
• But only overlap on 7 out of 40 plant species
• Howlers, majority of diet New leaves
• Ants almost entirely eat Mature leaves
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Example 2- Howlers and Sloths
• Can have up to 80% overlap in diet.
• But sloths eat little (lower BMR)
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Example 3- Malaysian Fruit eaters
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Malayan Fruit feeders
• Primates eat unripe fruits, hornbills eat ripe ones
• Primates feed in upper canopy along with 3 or so squirrel species
• Squirrels eat seeds, primates fruit flesh
• Primates supplement with leaves, birdds with insects or other fruits.
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Coevolution
• Between plants and animals
• A relationship developes between two organisms such that, as they interact with each other over time, each exerts a selection pressure on the other.
• Evolution of each becomes interdependent on that interaction
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Some primate examples
• “positive relationships”
–Seed dispersal
–Pollination
• “Negative relationships”
–Seed predation