Title: Ecology Notes
1Ecology Notes
- Chapter 54-56 Ecosystems, Populations and
Communities
2Ecology
- Components abioticnonliving chemical
physical factors bioticliving factors - Populationgroup of individuals of the same
species in a particular geographical area - Communityassemblage of populations of different
species - Ecosystemall abiotic factors and the community
of species in an area - Rachel Carson, 1962, Silent Spring
3Population characteristics
- Density of individuals per unit of area
- Dispersion pattern of spacing
- random unpredictable, patternless spacing (c)
clumped patchy aggregation
(a) uniform even spacing (b)
4Demography factors that affect growth decline
of populations
- Birthrate (natality, fecundity) of offspring
produced - Death rate (mortality)
- Age structure relative number of individuals of
each age - Survivorship curve plot of numbers still alive
at each age
5Population Growth Models
- Exponential model (blue) idealized population
in an unlimited environment (J-curve) r-selected
species (rper capita growth rate) - Logistic model (red) carrying capacity (K)
maximum population size that a particular
environment can support (S-curve) K-selected
species
6Population life history strategies
- r-selected (opportunistic)
- Short maturation lifespan
- Many (small) offspring usually 1 (early)
reproduction no parental care - High death rate
- K-selected (equilibrial)
- Long maturation lifespan
- Few (large) offspring usually several (late)
reproductions extensive parental care - Low death rate
7Population limiting factors
- Density-dependent factors competition
- predation
- stress/crowding
- Waste accumulation
- Density-independent factors weather/climate
- periodic disturbances
8Abiotic factors
- Biospherethe sum of all the planets ecosystems
- Biome areas of predominant flora and fauna
- Temperature
- Water
- Sunlight
- Wind
- Rocks Soil
- Periodic disturbances
Ecotone biome grading areas
9Global climate
Precipitation Winds
10Lake stratification turnover
- Thermal stratification vertical temperature
layering - Biannual mixing spring and summer
- Turnover changing water temperature profiles
brings oxygenated water from the surface to the
bottom and nutrient rich water form the bottom to
the surface
11Aquatic biomes
- Vertical stratification photic zone
photosynthetic light aphotic zone little light
thermocline narrow stratum of rapid temperature
chang benthic zone bottom substrate - Benthos community of organisms
- Detritus dead organic matter food for benthic
organisms
12Freshwater biomes
- Littoral zone shallow, well-lit waters close to
shore - Limnetic zone well-lit, open water farther from
shore - Profundal zone deep, aphotic waters
- Lake classification oligotrophic deep,
nutrient poor eutrophic shallow, high nutrient
content - mesotrophic moderate productivity
- Wetland area covered with water
- Estuary area where freshwater merges with ocean
13Marine biomes
- Intertidal zone area where land meets water
- Neritic zone shallow regions over continental
shelves - Oceanic zone very deep water past the
continental shelves - Pelagic zone open water of any depth
- Benthic zone seafloor bottom
- Abyssal zone benthic region in deep oceans
14Terrestrial biomes
- Tropical forests equator most complex constant
temperature and rainfall canopy - Savanna tropical grassland with scattered trees
occasional fire and drought large herbivores - Desert sparse rainfall (lt30cm/yr)
- Chaparral spiny evergreens at midlatitudes along
coasts - Temperate grassland all grasses seasonal
drought, occasional fires large mammals - Temperate deciduous forest midlatitude regions
broad-leaf deciduous trees - Coniferous forest cone-bearing trees
- Tundra permafrost very little precipitation
15Relationships, I
- Trophic structure / levels feeding relationships
in an ecosystem - Primary producers the trophic level that
supports all others autotrophs - Primary consumers herbivores
- Secondary and tertiary consumers carnivores
- Detrivores/detritus special consumers that
derive nutrition from non-living organic matter - Food chain trophic level food pathway
16Relationships, II
- Food webs interconnected feeding relationship in
an ecosystem
17Energy Flow, I
- Primary productivity (amount of light energy
converted to chemical energy by
autotrophs) Gross (GPP) total energy
Net (NPP) represents
the storage of energy available to consumers
Rs respiration - NPP GPP - Rs
- Biomass primary productivity reflected as dry
weight of organic material - Secondary productivity the rate at which an
ecosystem's consumers convert chemical energy of
the food they eat into their own new biomass
18Energy Flow, II
- Ecological efficiency of E transferred from
one trophic level to the next (5-20) - Pyramid of productivity multiplicative loss of
energy in trophic levels - Biomass pyramid trophic representation of
biomass in ecosystems - Pyramid of numbers trophic representation of the
number of organisms in an ecosystem
19Chemical Cycling
- Biogeochemical cycles the various nutrient
circuits, which involve both abiotic and biotic
components of an ecosystem - Water
- Carbon
- Nitrogen
- Phosphorus
20Community structure
- Community an assemblage of populations living
close enough together for potential interaction - Richness (number of species) abundance.
- Species diversity
- Hypotheses Individualistic chance assemblage
with similar abiotic requirements - Interactive assemblage locked into association
by mandatory biotic interactions
21Interactions
- Interspecific (interactions between populations
of different species within a community)
Predation including parasitism may
involve a keystone species/predator Competition - Commensalism
- Mutualism
22Predation defense
- Cryptic (camouflage) coloration
- Aposematic (warning) coloration
- Mimicry superficial resemblance to another
species v Batesian palatable/
harmless species mimics an unpalatable/ harmful
model v Mullerian 2 or more
unpalatable, aposematically colored species
resemble each other
23Competition a closer look
- Interference actual fighting over resources
- Exploitative consumption or use of similar
resources - Competitive Exclusion Principle (Lotka /
Volterra) 2 species with similar needs for the
same limiting resources cannot coexist in the
same place vGause experiment predators and prey
limit each other
24Competition evidence
- Resource partitioning sympatric species consume
slightly different foods or use other resources
in slightly different ways
- Character displacement sympatric species tend to
diverge in those characteristics that overlap
Ex Anolis lizard sp. perching sites in the
Dominican Republic
Ex Darwins finch beak size on the Galapagos
Islands
25The Niche
- Ecological niche the sum total of an organisms
use of biotic and abiotic resources in its
environment its ecological role
v fundamental the set of resources a
population is theoretically capable of using
under ideal conditions v realized the resources
a population actually uses - Thus, 2 species cannot coexist in a community if
their niches are identical
Ex Barnacle sp. on the coast of Scotland
26Succession
- Ecological succession transition in species
composition over ecological time - Primary begun in lifeless area no soil, perhaps
volcanic activity or retreating glacier - Secondary an existing community has been cleared
by some disturbance that leaves the soil intact
27Biodiversity crisis
- Extinction natural phenomenon, however, rate is
of concern.. - 50 loss of species when 90 of habitat is lost
- Major Threats
- Habitat destruction single greatest threat
cause of 73 of species designation as extinct,
endangered, vulnerable, rare 93 of coral reefs - Competition by exotic (non-native) species
cause of 68 of species designation as extinct,
endangered, vulnerable, rare travel - Overexploitation commercial harvest or sport
fishing illegal trade
28Biodiversity Human welfare
- 25 of all medical prescriptions
- Genetic variability
- Aesthetic and ethical reasons
- Species survival
29Conservation biology focus
- Preservationism setting side select areas as
natural and underdeveloped - Resource conservation public lands to meet the
needs of agriculture and extractive industries,
i.e., multiple use - Evolutionary / ecological view natural systems
result from millions of years of evolution and
ecosystem processes are necessary to maintain the
biosphere
30Geographic distribution of biodiversity
- Energy availability solar radiation
- Habitat heterogeneity environmental patchiness
- Niche specialization narrow resource range
specialization - Population interactions complex population
interactions
31Population species level conservation
- Biodiversity hot spot small area with an
exceptional concentration of species - Endemic species species found nowhere else
- Endangered species organism in danger of
extinction - Threatened species likely to become endangered
in the foreseeable future - Bioremediation use of living organisms to
detoxify polluted systems
32Human Impact
- Biological magnification trophic process in
which retained substances become more
concentrated at higher levels - Greenhouse effect warming of planet due to
atmospheric accumulation of carbon dioxide - Ozone depletion effect of chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs) released into the atmosphere - Rainforest destruction
- Cause Overpopulation?