Title: Community Structure
1Community Structure
2Abundance of Species in CommunitiesPrestons
Log-Normal Bell Curve
3Fig. 19.1 p. 379
6814 moths of 197 species from Rothamsted,
England (not shown a species with 1799
captures)
4Fig. 19.2 p. 380
- Place abundance of species on log2 scale of
octaves - Defines a partial bell curve
- Left of the y-axis species too rare to detect
in the sample
Trees of BCI, Panama
5Fig. 19.3 p. 380
Snakes of Panama
British birds
6HANDOUTPreston 1962
7Factors Promoting CommunityDiversity
8A) General Latitudinal Trend
- Species diversity is greatest in tropical areas
and declines toward either pole
9Fig. 19.6 p. 382
10Fig. 19.7 p. 383
11Fig. 19.9 p. 384
12B) History
- Older communities have had more time for
specialization and diversification of species - Might explain part of the tropics-vs.-
temperate-zone difference - Never-glaciated tropics vs. temperate zone that
was glaciated repeatedly
13C) Spatial Heterogeneity
- More spatial heterogeneity of habitat more
niches to be filled - Predicts less overlap in resource use in tropics
14HANDOUTLongenecker, 2007
15D) Intermediate-Disturbance Hypothesis
- Highest diversity of species occurs at
intermediate frequency of disturbance - High frequency several species die out due to
detrimental effects of the disturbance - Low frequency competitive exclusion occurs as
species approach carrying capacity of the habitat
16Fig. 19.23 p. 396
17HANDOUTSousa 1979
18Fig. 19.24 p. 397
- The "tail" of lowered abundance on one side or
the other may not exist - Tide-pool data support hypothesis
- Emergent-substrate data do not
19Fig. 19.25A p. 397
20Fig. 19.25B p. 397
21Regulation of Species Abundances in Ecosystems
22Regulation of Species Abundances in Ecosystems
- Ecologists generalize about effects of species on
one another in nutrient-vegetation-herbivore-carni
vore systems - 27 (3?3?3) different models of effects can be
drawn using level-to-level symbols - ?, ?, and ?? (symbolizing regulation of
abundance) - Ex N ? V ?? H ? C
23Fig. 21.12 p. 436
- HSS (1960) Predators limit herbivores, who do
not limit plants - Competition (C) is greater among plants and among
carnivores than among herbivores
24Fig. 21.12 p. 436
- MS (1987) Model incorporates environmental
stress as possibly trumping competition and
predation in regulating populations - Predation becomes progressively more important
than competition as the environment becomes more
benign
25Fig. 21.11 p. 436
26Fig. 21.12 p. 436
- HSS (1960) Strong competition among plants
herbivores compete only weakly and do not
regulate plants - MS (1987) Weak competition among plants
herbivores compete in benign environments and
regulate plants
27Table 21.3 p. 437
- In most studies, herbivore removal had strong
positive effect on plants - Supports MS model
28Two Additional Models
- Top-down Regulation
- N ? V ? H ? C
- aka Trophic Cascade
- Bottom-up Regulation
- N ? V ? H ? C
29Fig. 21.14 p. 439
30Fig. 21.15 p. 439Top-down regulation in Zion
National Park, Utah
Fig. 21.16 p. 440
Cougars rare
Cougars common
31HANDOUTHebblewhite et al. (2005)
32Table 21.4 p. 441
33Food Webs and Their Linkages
34Food Webs and Their Linkages
- Complexity of food webs is limited, primarily by
inefficiency of energy transfer from one trophic
level to next - Generally about 5-20
- Rest lost to heat of metabolism and decomposers
35Fig. 20.7 p. 408
- Food chains are short
- Data on 95 species in an estuary in Scotland
(5518 links)
36Fig. 20.8 p. 409
- Food chains shorten at lower productivity
- Experimental tree holes that varied in added leaf
litter (100, 10, or 1)
37Fig. 20.5 p. 407
- Connectance proportion of all total possible
links that occur 10/72 0.20 - Generally 0.14 regardless of webs diversity
38Two Alternate Hypotheses
- Constant Connectance
- L is some constant proportion of S2, which is the
maximum possible L - LS2 each species is linked to every other
- species, including itself via cannibalism
- Link-Species Scaling
- Posits linear relationship of L with S
39HANDOUTMartinez (1992)
40Constant ConnectanceSupported by Exponent of
1.54?
- S1 S1.54 S2
- Link-Species Scaling Regression Constant
Connectance - 20 101 400
- 50 413 2,500
- 100 1,202 10,000
41Diversity-Stability Hypothesis
42Diversity-Stability Hypothesis
- Stability resistance to change and rate of
recovery from change - Idea that more diverse communities resist and
recover from major change better than less
diverse systems - Some functional redundancy with increased
diversity of species
43Fig. 20.20 p. 419
168 experimental plots of MN prairie Community
stability Mean/SD for late-summer biomass over
10 years
44Fig. 20.21 p. 419
Resistance measures changes in abundance of plant
species