Community ecology Ch 53 U114PP - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

Community ecology Ch 53 U114PP

Description:

Occurs when species compete for a particular resource that is in short supply ... (a) Cuckoo bee (b) Yellow jacket. Figure 53.8a, b. Herbivory ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:28
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: scottby
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Community ecology Ch 53 U114PP


1
Community ecology- Ch 53 U114PP
2
Competition
Recall
  • Interspecific competition
  • Occurs when species compete for a particular
    resource that is in short supply
  • Competition can result in four outcomes
  • ongoing competition
  • competitive exclusion (local extinction)
  • resource partitioning
  • character displacement

3
Character Displacement
  • In character displacement
  • There is a tendency for characteristics to be
    more divergent in sympatric populations of two
    species than in allopatric populations of the
    same two species

4
Predation
  • Predation refers to an interaction
  • Where one species, the predator, kills and eats
    the other, the prey
  • A /- interaction

5
  • Feeding adaptations of predators include
  • Claws, teeth, fangs, stingers, and poison
  • Animals also display
  • A great variety of defensive adaptations

6
Prey Defenses
  • Cryptic coloration, or camouflage
  • Makes prey difficult to spot

7
Prey Defenses
  • Aposematic coloration
  • Warns predators to stay away from prey

8
Prey Defenses
  • In some cases, one prey species
  • May gain significant protection by mimicking the
    appearance of another

9
  • In Batesian mimicry
  • A palatable or harmless species mimics an
    unpalatable or harmful model

10
  • In Müllerian mimicry
  • Two or more unpalatable species resemble each
    other

11
Herbivory
  • Herbivory, the process in which an herbivore eats
    parts of a plant
  • Has led to the evolution of plant mechanical
    (e.g. thorns) and chemical defenses and
    consequent adaptations by herbivores

12
Parasitism
  • In parasitism, one organism, the parasite
  • Derives its nourishment from another organism,
    its host, which is harmed in the process
  • Not always a feedinge.g., brood parasitism
  • A /- interaction

13
Disease
  • The effects of disease on populations and
    communities
  • Is similar to that of parasites
  • Pathogens, disease-causing agents
  • Are typically bacteria, viruses, or protists

14
Mutualism
  • Mutualistic symbiosis, or mutualism
  • Is an interspecific interaction that benefits
    both species
  • A / interaction

15
Commensalism
  • In commensalism
  • One species benefits and the other is not
    affected
  • A /0 interaction (?)

16
  • Commensal interactions have been difficult to
    document in nature
  • Because any close association between species
    likely affects both species

17
Interspecific Interactions and Adaptation
  • Evidence for coevolution
  • Which involves reciprocal genetic change by
    interacting populations, is scarce
  • However, generalized adaptation of organisms to
    other organisms in their environment
  • Is a fundamental feature of life

18
  • Concept 53.3 Disturbance influences species
    diversity and composition
  • Decades ago, most ecologists favored the
    traditional view
  • That communities are in a state of equilibrium
  • However, a recent emphasis on change has led to a
    nonequilibrium model
  • Which describes communities as constantly
    changing after being buffeted by disturbances
  • Promotes diversity, because small scale
    disturbances enhance patchiness

19
What Is Disturbance?
  • A disturbance
  • Is an event that changes a community
  • Removes organisms from a community
  • Alters resource availability

20
  • Fire
  • Is a significant disturbance in most terrestrial
    ecosystems
  • Is often a necessity in some communities

21
  • The intermediate disturbance hypothesis
  • Suggests that moderate levels of disturbance can
    foster higher species diversity than low levels
    of disturbance
  • For most communities, disturbance is not bad-
    it is the norm

22
  • The large-scale fire in Yellowstone National Park
    in 1988
  • Demonstrated that communities can often respond
    very rapidly to a massive disturbance

Figure 53.22a, b
23
Human Disturbance
  • Humans
  • Are the most widespread agents of disturbance

This is not productive disturbance it is so
severe, species loss results.
24
  • Human disturbance to communities
  • Usually reduces species diversity
  • Humans also prevent some naturally occurring
    disturbances
  • Which can be important to community structure

25
Ecological Succession
  • Ecological succession
  • Is the predictable sequence of community and
    ecosystem changes after a disturbance

Why does succession occur? Some species are
adapted to initial abiotic conditions (foundation
species). They gradually alter the environment
and facilitate other species to come in. Shifts
from r-selected to K-selected species
26
  • Primary succession
  • Occurs where no soil exists when succession
    begins
  • Secondary succession
  • Begins in an area where soil remains after a
    disturbance

27
  • Early-arriving species
  • May facilitate the appearance of later species by
    making the environment more favorable
  • May inhibit establishment of later species
  • May tolerate later species but have no impact on
    their establishment

28
  • Succession on the moraines in Glacier Bay, Alaska
  • Follows a predictable pattern of change in
    vegetation and soil characteristics

29
Climax community?
  • Eventually there are no more big transitions of
    species types- supposedly the community is
    full
  • Myth! Always microhabitat changes, so a given
    area may have a variety of succession stages in it

30
  • Concept 53.4 Biogeographic factors affect
    community diversity
  • Two key factors correlated with a communitys
    species diversity
  • Are its geographic location and its size

31
Equatorial-Polar Gradients
  • The two key factors in equatorial-polar gradients
    of species richness
  • Are probably evolutionary history and climate

32
(No Transcript)
33
  • Species richness generally declines along an
    equatorial-polar gradient
  • And is especially great in the tropics
  • The greater age of tropical environments
  • May account for the greater species richness
  • Higher productivity, longer growing season
  • Spatial heterogeneity- more microhabitats

700 species of birds in Central America fewer
than 50 toward the poles 711 tree species in
Malaysia 10-15 in Michigan 200 ant species in
Brazil 7 in Alaska
  • Climate
  • Is likely the primary cause of the latitudinal
    gradient in biodiversity
  • What components make up climate?

34
  • The two main climatic factors correlated with
    biodiversity
  • Are solar energy input and water availability

35
Area Effects
  • The species-area curve quantifies the idea that
  • All other factors being equal, the larger the
    geographic area of a community, the greater the
    number of species

36
  • A species-area curve of North American breeding
    birds
  • Supports this idea

37
Island Equilibrium Model
  • Species richness on islands
  • Depends on island size, distance from the
    mainland, immigration, and extinction

38
  • The equilibrium model of island biogeography
    maintains that
  • Species richness on an ecological island levels
    off at some dynamic equilibrium point

Figure 53.27ac
39
  • Studies of species richness on the Galápagos
    Islands
  • Support the prediction that species richness
    increases with island size
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com