Title: Lecture 9: Interspecific Competition
1Lecture 9 Interspecific Competition
2Competition
- In the past chapters, we have been discussing how
populations grow and what factors determine that
growth. - What happens when you put populations of more
than one species together?
3How do species interact?
- Competition
- Predation
- Herbivory
- Parasitism
- Disease
- Mutualism
4Interspecific Competition
- Competition
- When two species use the same limited resource to
the detriment of both species. - Assessment-some general features of interspecific
competition - Competitive exclusion or coexistence
- Tilmans model of competition for specific
resources (ZINGIs) - Coexistence reducing competition by dividing
resources
5Assessment
- mechanisms
- consumptive or exploitative using resources
(most common) - preemptive using space, based on presence
- overgrowth exploitative PLUS preemptive
- chemical antibiotics or allelopathy
- territorial like preemptive, but behavior
- encounter chance interactions
6Modeling coexistence?
- Can we model the growth of 2 species?
- Remember logistic model?
- What is K?
- Now we add another factor that can limit the
abundance of a species. - Another species.
-
7Freshmen and donuts an example
- There is a room with 100 donuts what does a
typical male freshmen do? - First eat several donuts. (A male freshman can
eat 10 donuts) - Second rapidly tell friends
- But not too many!
- Third Room reaches carrying capacity at 10 male
freshmen. - So K10 for male freshmen.
8Freshmen and donuts an example
- What happens if a male and female discover the
room at the same time? - First eat several donuts. (A female freshman
can eat 5 donuts) - Second rapidly tell friends
- But not too many!
- Third Room reaches carrying capacity at ? males
and ? females. - What is the carrying capacity?
- It depends
9Lotka-Volterra
- Need a way to combine the two equations.
- If species are competing, the number of species A
decreases if number of species B increases. - Such that
- Where alpha is the competition coefficient
- Lotka-Volterra A logistic model of interspecific
competition of intuitive factors. -
10Freshman Example
- In a room we have 100 donuts.
- Need 10 donuts for each male freshmen.
- So K1 10
- Need only 5 donuts for each female freshmen.
- So K2 20
- If room is at K1 and 1 male leaves, how many
females can come in? - So, , where a 0.5
- And, , where B 2
11Possible outcomes when put two species together.
- Species A excludes Species B
- Species B excludes Species A
- Coexistence
12Changes in population 1
13Changes in population 1
Yellow both increase White both decrease
14Changes in population 2
Yellow both increase White both decrease
15Yellow both increase White both
decrease Green Sp 1 increase Brown Sp 2
increase
16Tilmans model
- Problems with Lotka-Voltera model?
- No mechanism
- Dr. Tilman developed a model based on resource
use.
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181 no species can survive 2 Only A can live 3
Species A out competes B 4 Stable
coexistence 5 Species B out competes A 6 Only
B can live
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20Lab Experiments?
- Gause using yeast and Birch using beetles.
- Results show both exclusion and coexistence
- It was hypothesized that the yeasts had enough
differences to allow coexistence. - i.e. the requirements of the 2 species are
slightly different.
21Gauses hypothesis
- As a result of competition two similar species
scarcely ever occupy similar niches - Also called the competitive exclusion principle
- Complete competitors cannot coexist.
- Niche still controversy about the definition.
- 1) The role of a species in the community Elton
1927. - 2) a subdivision of the habitat. - Grinnell 1917.
22Back to Competition Coefficient
- Competition coefficient
- Intensity of competition from species.
- In our original donut example
- a 1/ ß
- Also, can read about Gauses yeast populations in
book.
23Changes in population 1
K2
K1 10 K2 20 a 0.5 ß 2
K2/ß
24Back to Competition Coefficient
- Competition coefficient
- Intensity of competition from species.
- In our original donut example
- a 1/ ß
- However in systems that are more complex
- the coefficients are not necessarily reciprocals.
- And carrying capacity may not be purely
determined by resource being competed for. -
25Changes in population 1
K2
K1 10 K2 17 a 0.5 ß 3
K2/ß
26Niche Hutchinson
27Niche Hutchinson
- Redefinition in 1958.
- Two environmental variables, can produce an
environmental space or a species niche. - Can add many other environmental factors.
- n-dimensional hypervolume
- Or a species Fundamental Niche
- However, because competition can limit this
fundamental niche, what we witness in nature is
the - Realized Niche
28Can 2 species exist in the same niche?
29Can 2 species exist in the same niche?
30Can 2 species exist in the same niche?
31Can 2 species exist in the same niche?
- Observation
- Several types of warblers live in the same tree
species. - Hypothesis based on competition theory
- Warblers will use different parts/areas of the
trees. - Experiment
- No experiment conducted, but observations can be
made to test hypothesis.
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37McArthur suggested competition to explain warbler
patterns
- Ghost of competition past.
- So how do species coexist?
- Different food resources, i.e. diet
specialization - What about plants?
- Plants usually need same resources, water,
nutrients, light. - What about phytoplankton?
38How do phytoplankton live in the same location?
- Phytoplankton
- Common pool of nutrients
- Often large number of species
- Same environment, i.e. amount of light,
temperature. - In many bodies of water, nutrients are limited.
- Reasons?
- Environmental instability
- Non-equilibrium system.
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40Assumptions of competition theory
- life history characteristics of species are
adequately summarized by the per capita growth
rate of species - deterministic equations are sufficient to model
population growth, and environmental fluctuations
need not be considered - the environment is spatially homogeneous and
migration is unimportant - competition is the only important biological
interaction and - coexistence requires a stable equilibrium point.
41How to determine if interspecific competition has
occurred (or is occurring)?
- From Wiens (1989)
- Need a checkerboard distribution
- Species overlap in resource use
- Intraspecific competition occurs
- Resource is limited
- One or more species is limited
- Other hypotheses do not fit.
42Example where criteria 1 and 2 fit.
Feeds far from shore
Feeds near shore
43Test theory with plants
- Observation
- Plants all require light, nutrients and water.
- Plant often found together.
- Hypothesis
- Competition between plants ought to be common.
- Plants do worse with other plants.
- Experiment
- Results
44Experimental design.
- Compare the growth of annuals and shrubs in the
Mojave Desert. - 2 experiments
- Effects of annuals on shrubs
- Effects of shrubs on annuals
- How?
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46Results Annual had positive benefits from
shrubs. Shrubs had negative benefits from shrubs.
47- Facilitation
- Where one or both species benefit (have a
positive effect) due to the presence of the other
species.
48Resource utilization curves
- Species may evolve to minimize the impact of
competition.
49Character Displacement
- Definition
- In areas where species overlap, there has been a
divergence between the two species, supposedly as
a result of competition.
50Example Galapagos finches
- Theory
- According to displacement theory, species that
are sometime found together will have a character
that has changed compared to when the species are
found by themselves. - Observation
- There are three species of finches in the
Galapagos that are sometimes found together and
sometimes separate. - Hypothesis
- There will be differentiation in bill size when
species are on the same island - Test (Not truly an experiment)
- Examine the bill size of three species.
- Results
51Results
Could we actually test this?
52Four criteria for determining character
displacement
- Change in mean value of the character in areas of
overlap should not be predictable from variation
within areas of overlap or areas of isolation. - Sampling should be done at more than one set of
locations - Characters need to be heritable.
- Species must actually be competing for resource.
53r vs. K selected species
- What do r and K refer to?
- r growth rate
- K carrying capacity
- r selected
- Species that remain in the growth rate stage for
most of their existence. - K selected
- Where organisms remain near the carrying capacity
- Influenced more by competition.
54Is it really competition?
- How else could these ideas be framed?
- Conflict avoidance.
- Not survival of fittest, but perhaps least
noticeable. - Best hider.
- Path or least resistance