Title: Ecological Conditions
1Ecological Conditions
2Summary of the effects of conditions on species
distributions
- Lethal conditions may limit distributions but
they only need to occur occasionally in order to
do so.
3Saguaro cactus in snow
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5Summary of the effects of conditions on species
distributions
- Distributions are more often limited by
conditions that are regularly suboptimal (rather
than lethal) leading to a reduction in growth or
reproduction or increased chance of mortality.
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7Summary of the effects of conditions on species
distributions
- Suboptimal conditions often act by altering the
outcome of a biological interaction between the
species of interest and other species.
8St. JohnsWort aka Klamath weed
9Chrysolina Beetles on St. Johns Wort
10Summary of the effects of conditions on species
distributions
- Suboptimal conditions often interact with other
conditions so that it is often impossible to
locate a single condition as the most important
factor.
11Mediterranean fruit fly
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13Summary of the effects of conditions on species
distributions
- Suboptimal conditions are often moderated by the
evolutionary, physiological and behavioral
responses of the organisms.
14Kangaroo Rat
15Summary of the effects of conditions on species
distributions
- Towards the edge of a species range, it occupies
patches in which conditions are closest to those
found in the center of its range.
16Rufous grasshopper
17Relative Humidity
- Relative humidity - is a measure of the amount of
moisture in the air - all terrestrial organisms must conserve water and
prevent water loss to surrounding environment -
in general the higher the relative humidity (the
amount of water contained in the air) the less
energy an organism has to expend to conserve water
18Transpiration
19Joshua Tree Xerophyte grow in dry habitats
20Water lily Hydrophyte grow in wet habitats
21Hepatica Mesophyte grow in moist habitats
22True Xerophyte leaf - Oleander
23Barrel cactus Succulent
24Desert Ephemerals South Africa
25Desert soil profile Phreatophytes with deep
root systems
26Soil pH
- plants suffer direct toxic effects when soil pH
is below 3 or above 9 - there are naturally
occurring soils which have these pH's - However at more moderate pH there can be indirect
effects
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28Salinity
- For aquatic organisms the concentration of salt
in the water presents a condition that limits
distributions
29salinity gradient in an estuary
30Pollution
- Pollution - unfortunately this is becoming a
condition which species must respond to - Toxic effects - heavy metals in soils, often from
mine tailings, are deposited onto soil in high
concentrations - 2. Acid precipitation
31Bent grass Agrostis tenuis
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33Trees Burnt by Acid Precipitation Northeastern
U.S.
34Resources
- Resources are parts of the physical environment
that are consumed (used up) by living organisms
There are many different resources for plants
solar radiation, soil nutrients, water, carbon
dioxide, space - Â
- For animals primarily food sources, oxygen,
space - Â
- For decomposers a supply of dead organic
matter, oxygen (for some), space
35The Niche
- ecological niche - the way in which an organism
interacts with all of the biotic and abiotic
factors in its environment - often described as
how the organism makes its living, its functional
role, but includes the habitat it occupies
36G. Evelyn Hutchinson age 18
37N-dimensional niche
38Hutchinsons Niche Definitions
- The fundamental niche - the set of resources and
conditions that permits the survival and
reproduction of an organism - many resources and
conditions interact to form the niche. - The realized niche - the portion of the
fundamental niche actually occupied by the
species when restricted by other organisms -
restricted by competition, predation, parasites,
disease. - - Hutchinson 1958