Title: Community Ecology
1Community Ecology
2Symbioses
- Symbiosis means species living in close or
intimate association
- parasitism ,- one species, the parasite,
benefits at the expense of the host
- commensalism ,0 or 0,0 here there may be a
positive effect for one species or neither, but
neither is harmed
- mutualism , a situation in which two species
interact with each other and both benefit
3Commensalism - ,0 or 0,0 - can have positive
effect for one species or for neither
Shark with remora and water buffalo with cattle
egret
4Mutualism
- Mutualism - the individuals in a population of
each mutualist species grow and/or survive and/or
reproduce at a higher rate when in the presence
of individuals of the other. Each benefits
(,) - It is important to note that mutualistic
interactions evolve because benefits to each
partner outweigh any costs of the mutualism -
species still act in "selfish" way
5Phlox family adaptations to many different pollin
ators
6Bumblebee covered with pollen
7Bumblebee pollinating beebalm
8Moth pollinating flower note proboscis
9Hummingbird Pollination
10Hummingbird pollinated flower
11Bat Pollination
12Mycorrhizae
- Endomycorrhizae - fungal hyphae penetrate the
outer cells of the plant root and often form
swellings, coils, or minute branches and extend
into the surrounding soil. Endomycorrhizae are
the most common type of mycorrhizae. - Ectomycorrhizae - hyphae surround the root, but
do not penetrate its cells
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14Mutualisms involving behavior clownfish and
sea anemones
15Close-up of Anemone and Clownfish
16Mutualisms involving culturing other species
leaf cutter ants and fungi
17Mutualisms involving culturing other species
18Perhaps the most important mutualism of all
19Community Structure and Dynamics
- Often a small number of species in the community
exert strong control on that communitys
structure, especially on the composition,
relative abundance, and diversity of species.
20Species Diversity
- The species diversity of a community is the
variety of different kinds of organisms that make
up the community.
- Species diversity has two components.
- Species richness is the total number of different
species in the community.
- The relative abundance of the different species
is the proportion each species represents of the
total individuals in the community.
- Species diversity is dependent on both species
richness and relative abundance.
21A comparison of species diversity in two
communities
22How do the niches differ for all these plants?
Konza Prairie, Kansas
23Stability and Disturbance
- Stability is the tendency of a community to reach
and maintain a relatively constant composition of
species despite disturbance. This is sometimes
referred to as equilibrium. - Many communities seem to be characterized by
change rather than stability.
- The nonequilibrium model proposes that
communities constantly change following a
disturbance.
- A disturbance is any agent which causes complete
or partial destruction of the ecological
community resulting in the creation of bare
space. Disturbance changes a community by
removing organisms or altering resource
availability. - Storms, fires, floods, droughts, frosts, human
activities, or overgrazing can be disturbances.
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25Example of Intermediate Disturbance
26Human Disturbance Habitat Fragmentation
Habitat fragmentation the process by which a
natural landscape is broken up into small parcel
s of natural ecosystems, isolated from
one another by lands dominated by human
activities.
27Human Disturbance Habitat Fragmentation
28Succession
- Ecological succession is the transition in
species composition in disturbed areas over
ecological time.
- Primary succession begins in a lifeless area
where soil has not yet formed, such as a volcanic
island or the moraine left behind as a glacier
retreats. - Secondary succession occurs where an existing
community has been removed by a disturbance such
as a clear-cut or fire, while the soil is left
intact.
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30Primary Succession at Glacier Bay
31Secondary Succession an old field in upstate
New York
32In Succession
- Early arrivals and later-arriving species are
linked in one of three key processes.
- Early arrivals may facilitate the appearance of
later species by changing the environment.
- For example, early herbaceous species may
increase soil fertility.
- Early species may inhibit establishment of later
species.
- Early species may tolerate later species but
neither hinder nor help their colonization.
33Trophic Structure
- The trophic structure of a community is
determined by the feeding relationships between
organisms.
- The transfer of food energy up the trophic levels
from its source in autotrophs (usually
photosynthetic organisms) through herbivores
(primary consumers) and carnivores (secondary and
tertiary consumers) and eventually to decomposers
is called a food chain. - In the 1920s, Oxford University biologist Charles
Elton recognized that food chains are not
isolated units but are linked together into food
webs.
34Charles Elton 1900-1991
35Simple Food Chains
36Simple Food Web
Antarctic Ocean
37A More Complex Food Web
Arctic Ocean
38A Really Complex Food Web
39How long are food chains?
- Each food chain within a food web is usually only
a few links long.
- Charles Elton pointed out that the length of most
food chains is only four or five links.
- Research in the 1990s by Gary Polis indicated
that desert food chains can be very long up to
18 links.
40Gary Polis 1946-2000
41Some Complex Desert Food Chains
42Why limits the length of a food chain?
- The energetic hypothesis suggests that the length
of a food chain is limited by the inefficiency of
energy transfer along the chain.
- Only about 10 of the energy stored in the
organic matter of each trophic level is converted
to organic matter at the next trophic level.
- The energetic hypothesis predicts that food
chains should be relatively longer in habitats
with higher photosynthetic productivity.
- The dynamic stability hypothesis suggests that
long food chains are less stable than short
chains.
- Population fluctuations at lower trophic levels
are magnified at higher levels, making top
predators vulnerable to extinction.
- In a variable environment, top predators must be
able to recover from environmental shocks that
can reduce the food supply all the way up the
food chain. - The dynamic stability hypothesis predicts that
food chains should be shorter in unpredictable
environments.
- Most of the available data supports the energetic
hypothesis.
43Dominant and Keystone Species
- Certain species have an especially large impact
on community structure because they are highly
abundant or because they play a pivotal role in
community dynamics. - The exaggerated impact of these species may occur
through their trophic interactions or through
their influences on the physical environment.
- Dominant species are those species in a community
that are most abundant or have the highest
biomass (the sum weight of all individuals in a
population). - Keystone species are not necessarily the most
abundant in a community.
- They influence community structure by their key
ecological niches.
- If keystone species are removed, community
structure is greatly affected.
44Ponderosa Pine as Dominant Species
45Wolves as Keystone Predators - Dynamics of a
Trophic Cascade
46Actors in Trophic Cascade
Wolf Coyote
Big Sage Pronghorn
47Beaver As Keystone Species
48Beaver As Keystone Species
Stream before and after Beaver dam construction
Beaver pond succession