Our ecological ‘footprint’… 1). The hierarchical nature and processes of different levels of...

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Our ecological ‘footprint’… 1)

Transcript of Our ecological ‘footprint’… 1). The hierarchical nature and processes of different levels of...

Page 1: Our ecological ‘footprint’… 1). The hierarchical nature and processes of different levels of ecological systems:

Our ecological ‘footprint’…1)

Page 2: Our ecological ‘footprint’… 1). The hierarchical nature and processes of different levels of ecological systems:

The hierarchical nature and processes of different levels of ecological systems:

Page 3: Our ecological ‘footprint’… 1). The hierarchical nature and processes of different levels of ecological systems:

Species InteractionsCh 17 Herbivory

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Objectives

• Herbivory Effects on plants How demonstrate herbivory effects Herbivore selectivity Plant deterrents to herbivory What limits herbivory?•

Page 5: Our ecological ‘footprint’… 1). The hierarchical nature and processes of different levels of ecological systems:

In food chains, all life forms are both consumers and victims of consumers.

• Predators• Parasites• Parasitoids• Pathogens • Herbivores

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Herbivory: Effects on plants

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Spruce budworm

Outbreaks of herbivorous insects can defoliate forests.

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Herbivory has great effects on plants:1) individual/ecosystem2) population 3) community

• If prefer dominant species--->

• What is a keystone• herbivore?

• If prefer subdominant species--->

Figure 1

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Does herbivore control plant species?If….then…

• Natural enemies hypothesis: • Biological control:

Figure 2

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Klamath weed + beetle(biological control agent)

In spite of plant defenses, herbivores can control plant population size.

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***Are herbivores ‘lawnmowers’ or selective feeders? What 3 factorsmay explainresults?

Figure 3

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***What are plant deterrents to herbivory?

• Structural defense• Low nutritional content; sequester nutritious parts• Mutualistic defense (ant-acacia)• Secondary compounds

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Types of secondary compounds

• growth regulators

• toxins against generalist herbivores specialists evolve to detoxify toxin often N-based lignin, alkaloids, non-protein amino acids, cyanogenic glycosides--->HCN

• digestive inhibitors against specialists often C-based

tannins, phenolics, terpenoids

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Chemical defenses

• Constitutive: high levels at all times• Induced: increase greatly after • attack • Theory: Cost of defense is too high to

maintain under light herbivory.• (but how quickly can they make them?

• Hypothesis: Plants ‘eavesdrop on neighbors - signal to make defense.

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What is evidence that plant defenses are induced by herbivory?

• Mite sp 1 attacks.• Plant responds by making defense

chemical.• Mite sp 2 attacks but in much lower

numbers.

#2

to #1

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Sample exam ?

1. Contrast the main difference in these types of plant chemical defenses:

A. Constitutive B. Inducible

2. Relative to a constitutive defense, how does an inducible defense benefit the plant?

What is one potential negative aspect of an inducible defense?

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Question cont.3. Showshoe hares eat young shoots of trees in winter.

Ecologists found that trees with a high % shoots eaten in Year 1 had a high concentration of chemical defense in Year 2.

The question is: Did herbivory in Yr 1 CAUSE the high defense in yr 2?

A. Develop an “if…then” that addresses this observation.

B. Complete a figure to illustrate the expected results that would support your hypothesis. Label axes.

C. What is a key assumption underlying your hypothesis?

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***Describe major pattern in figure. Generate a WHY ? Develop an ‘If…then’.

April October

Herbivores of oak leaves

Figure 5

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Hypothesis/prediction:

• If oak leaves become less suitable insect food as they age,

• then caterpillars fed young leaves will grow better than if fed slightly older leaves.

• Diet larval weight % adults emerge• young leaves 45 76• old leaves 18 0

• ***What is conclusion?• Do data support the hypothesis?

“Figure” 6

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***What are three changes as a leaf ages that could account for the previous results? (3 alternative hypotheses) • H1: Increase in toughness

• H2: Increase in secondary chemicals

• H3: Decrease in nutrient quality

Toughness index

Leaf ageFigure 7

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***Develop predictions for H1 toughness and H2 chemical defense.

• If leaf toughness explains seasonal feeding pattern of oak insects,

• then larvae should grow equally well when eating ground-up old vs. young leaves.

• If chemical defenses have increased with leaf age, • then larvae should grow better on ground-up leaves of

young than old leaves.

• ***Are predictions ‘operational’?• Do they contain independent and dependent

variables?

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***Results

• Larvae fed ground-up leaves Larval weight

• Young leaves 37• Old leaves 35

• ***Which hypothesis is supported?• Why hasn’t NS favored insect mouth parts able

to cope with tough leaves?• 3rd alternative hypothesis is still possible;

Maybe poorer nutrition in later summer; then NS toward early feeding.

“Figure” 9

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• Herbivores consume only @ 10% of plant productivity (up to 30-60% in grasslands). Why so little?

• ***What factors limit herbivory? • Predators• Herbivores• Plants• Nutrients• Abiotic factors

• The ‘world is green’ hypothesis: Herbivores consume a small % of vegetation because they are held in check by a variety of factors.

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Top-down control Tri-trophic predators interactions

herbivores

plants

nutrients/light Bottom-up control

“Figure” 10

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Observation/question: Despite many potential herbivores, why do leaves lose low leaf area?• Observation: Birds eat insect herbivores.

• ***Hypothesis:• If bird predation on insect herbivores indirectly reduces the amount of leaf area consumed,

• ***Prediction: then leaf area consumed will be greater for plants

with bird-exclusion cages than those without cages.

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Experimental set-up…caged tree saplings

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Results:1) number of insects: 70% greater on saplings without birds than with birds. 2) % leaf area missing: 35% without birds 22% with birds

• *** What’s conclusion?• Support for hypothesis?• Tri-trophic interaction; top-down control.• Bird predation: directly reduces # of herbivores indirectly reduces leaf damage by herbivores• New questions: Will 1) decreases in bird

populations due to forest fragmentation or 2) change in phenology increase insect damage?

“Figure” 12