Title: Ecosystem
1Ecosystem
- Ecosystem community (all biotic) physical
environment (all abiotic) - Ecology study of interrelationships between
biotic and abiotic elements in an ecosystem
2Habitat
- Habitat any part of the Earth where a species
can live, temporarily or permanently - organisms physical surroundings
- where an organism lives
3Ecological Niche
- Ecological Niche functional role of a species
in the community, including habitat, activities
relationships - what an organism does, its occupation
4Abiotic Factors
- Sunlight
- Water
- Air
- Climate (Temperature, precipitation, wind)
- Soil Rocks
- Periodic disturbances
5Key Properties of Communities
- 1) Diversity variety of different organisms
- 2) Prevalent Form of Vegetation
- 3) Stability ability to resist change
- 4) Trophic Structure
6Species Diversity
- Species diversity often evaluated based on two
factors - 1) Species Richness total number of different
species - 2) Relative Abundance or Evenness number of
fairly common or noticeable species
7Species Diversity
Species Richness ? Relative Abundance ?
8Interspecific Interactionsin a Community
- 1) Competition
- 2) Predation
- (predator-prey or herbivore-plant)
- 3) Symbiosis
9Competition
- Interspecific Competition
- VS
- Intraspecific Competition
10Competitive Exclusion Principle
- Competitive Exclusion Principle no two species
can occupy the same niche at the same time - two species so similar that they compete for
the same limiting resources cannot coexist in the
same place - - G. F. Gause
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12Chthamalus vs Balanustwo species of barnacles
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14Intertidal Ecology Foundations of Experimental
Community Ecology
Joseph Connell, 1961
The Pattern Barnacle distributions in rocky
intertidal zones
Mean High Water Spring Tide
Mean High Water Neap Tide
Mean Low Water Neap Tide
Chthalamus stellatus
Balanus balanoides
Mean Low Water Spring Tide
15- Alternative Hypotheses
- Chthamalus distribution is determined by physical
factors - Chthamalus distribution is determined by space
competition with Balanus - Cthamalus distribution is determined by predation
by the snail, Thais lapillus
16Three Experimental Manipulations
Rock
(1) Transplanted rocks to regions throughout
intertidal
Settled Chthamalus
Mean High Water Spring Tide
Mean High Water Neap Tide
Mean Low Water Neap Tide
Chthamulus stellatus
Balanus balanoides
Mean Low Water Spring Tide
17Three Experimental Manipulations
Rock
(2) On rocks settled by both species, partitioned
rock in ½ and removed all Balanus from one side.
Settled Chthamalusand Balanus
Mean High Water Spring Tide
Mean High Water Neap Tide
Mean Low Water Neap Tide
Chthamalus stellatus
Balanus balanoides
Mean Low Water Spring Tide
18Three Experimental Manipulations
Snail exclosure
(3) Performed a snail exclosure experiment
Mean High Water Spring Tide
Mean High Water Neap Tide
Mean Low Water Neap Tide
Chthamalus stellatus
Balanus balanoides
Mean Low Water Spring Tide
19Results
- In absence of Balanus, Chthamalus enjoyed high
survival throughout intertidal zone - physical factors not important
- Snail exclosure had no affect on Chthamalus
survival - snail predation not important
- (3)Balanus removal greatly enhanced Chthamalus
survival - competition for space is important
Mean High Water Spring Tide
Mean High Water Neap Tide
Mean Low Water Neap Tide
Chthamalus stellatus
Balanus balanoides
Mean Low Water Spring Tide
20Competitive Exclusion Principle
- Loser must adapt or be eliminated
- One possibility is Resource Partitioning,
- they use the same resource at different
- times, ways, or places
- (at least one difference between the two
organisms niches)
21Resource Partitioning
- Competitors segregate to avoid competition based
on - Size of food
- Type of food
- Habitat usage
- Feeding times
lions hunt large prey, leopards smaller prey
22Resource Partitioning
hawks hunt in daytime, owls at night
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24Predation
- Predation consumption of one species prey by
another predator, also includes herbivores
eating plants
What are some adaptations that have evolved in
predators and in prey?
25Adaptations
- Predators speed quickness, eyesight,
camouflage, larger brain, sharp claws teeth,
stingers, and poisons - Prey speed quickness, hiding, live in groups,
porcupine quills , turtle shell, camouflage,
chemicals (skunk, poisons), distraction displays,
and mimicry - Plants spines, thorns, tough leathery leaves,
protective chemicals (strychnine, morphine,
nicotine, distasteful)
26Selective Pressures
- Selective pressures are elements of an organisms
environment that make an adaptation
advantageous.
Identify the selective pressure for the following
adaptations Long, thick fur Thorns Fangs Camoufla
ge Production of beta lactamase
27Symbiotic Relationships
- Species 1 Species 2
- 1) Parasitism benefits harms
- 2) Mutualism benefits benefits
- 3) Commensalism benefits neutral
28Parasitism
- Parasitism is where the parasite gets nourishment
from the host, much like predation except host is
usually not killed immediately. - Example microbes that infect plants animals
Plasmodium vivax invades RBC, causing them to
burst and triggering the chills fever of
malaria - Over 100 human parasites are known
29Mutualism
- Examples
- Honey bees get nectar while pollinating flowers
- Rhizobium, N2- fixing bacteria that provide
nitrogen to plants in return for glucose from the
plant - Mycorrhizae fungi living in plant roots that
increase absorption of nutrients get nutrients
from the plant
30Mycorrhizae fungi living in plant roots
31Mycorrhizae fungi increase absorption of
nutrients by plants
32Commensalism
- In commensalism the host often provides a home or
transportation - For example Remoras attached to sharks
33Commensalism
- Examples of commensalism
- Epiphytes which are plants that grow on plants
- E. coli bacteria that live in human intestine
34Life on a Leaf
- A look at the fungal community that grows on
healthy new leaves.
Includes examples of a variety of
interrelationships between organisms.
35Fungi
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37Fungi
- Heterotrophs
- Digest food externally absorb small nutrient
molecules - Most are multicellular (yeast unicellular)
- Form a mycelium, which is a netlike mass of
filaments called hyphae - Hyphae grow extend around and through food
source
38Hyphae grow longer, not thicker WHY?
39Production of antibiotic by Penicillium fungus
What type of relationship?
40Fungi
- Fungi grow FAST mycelium can add up to
kilometer of hyphae per day - Hyphae grow through or around plant cells
(enzymes digest plant cells) - If fungus grows on dead plant ??
- If fungus grows on live plant ??
41Fungal Reproduction
- Yeast is unicellular and reproduces by dividing
into two new cells - Sexual or Asexual?
42Fungal Reproduction
- In multicellular fungi, sometimes two different
hyphae fuse together (combining their DNA) and
produce a spore - Spore develops into new mycelium
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44Fungal Life Cycle
45- Mycelium can live a LONG time in the soil.
- In Northern Michigan one mycelium formed from a
single spore about 1500 years ago covers about 30
acres - In Oregon a single mycelium is 3.4 miles in
diameter, covers 2200 acres, weighs 100s of tons
and is at least 2400 years old
46Coevolution
- Coevolution is when the adaptations of two
species are closely connected that is when an
adaptation in one species leads to a counter
adaptation in a second species. - Coevolution is when two species, with a close
ecological relationship, act as selective
pressures for each other
47Coevolution
- Adaptation the passionflower vines, Passiflora,
produce toxic chemicals that protect their
leaves - Counter adaptation
- Heliconius butterfly
- caterpillars eat the
- leaves they have
- enzymes that break
- down toxic chemicals
48- Behavioral adaptation by Heliconius females is
not laying eggs on leaves with bright yellow eggs
already on them which would reduce
intraspecific competition
49- Some passionflower vines have sugar secreting
glands that mimic the eggs,
50Coevolution
- Adaptation Bats use echolocation (beams of
ultrasonic sound waves, 20-60 kHz, returning
echoes) to see prey - Counter adaptation some insects (lacewings,
praying mantises, most moths) can hear
high-pitched sound waves
51- Bats in search mode send out clicks at 10 to
20/sec, gets closer to prey rate increases up
to several 100/sec just prior to snatching prey - Bats detect prey over short range 5 to 10 m
- Moths detect clicks 40 m away, and fly away from
the slow click rate - If fast click rate detected they take evasive
maneuvers (power dives, barrel rolls, etc)
52- Counter adaptation tiger moths generate their
own clicks - Warns bat of bad tasting prey (avoid after 1st
taste) - Startle the bat (bats do get used to it)
- jam the sonar interfere with bats ability to
pinpoint prey - Only works if clicks arrive with 1st returning
echo, so window of opportunity only 1/1,000 sec - Bats still catch gt50 of prey they attack
53- Counter-counter adaptation tropical gleaning
bats use ultra high frequency (up to 212 kHz)
sound waves that are above the insects ability to
detect - Counter-counter-counter adaptation moths have
sensors that detect wind movement created when
bats hover for an instant prior to striking prey
gives moth a chance to quickly drop to ground - Right now bats are developing ???