Title: Terrestrial Ecology
1Terrestrial Ecology
- Introduction to ecology
- Competitive interactions_1
- Competitive interactions_2
- Predator-prey interactions
- Plant-herbivore interactions_1
- Plant-herbivore interactions_2
- More complicated ecological interactions
2Main questions
- How do plants defend themselves from herbivores?
- Which plants use what defences?
- How do herbivores counteract plant defences?
- What are the consequences of these interactions
on feeding patterns in herbivores?
3Distribution of plant defenses
41st How can we classify herbivores?
By feeding niche
5Examples of herbivores by feeding niche
6Examples of herbivores by feeding niche
7Grazers vs. Browsers
8Counteracting plant defences?
- Behavioural
- Avoid, eat something else (defence successful)
- Eat less, mix diet (defence partly successful)
- Physiological
- ? effect once eatene.g. metabolise excrete
toxin(defence partly or NOT successful) - Physical
- Tough tongue/lips
- Tooth jaw morphology
9How do grazers deal with grass?
structural
chemical
Grasses Forbs Trees/shrubs
10How do grazers deal with grass?
Example eastern grey kangaroos Macropus
giganteus
Sanson GD (1989) Morphological adaptations of
teeth to diets and feeding in the Macropodoidea.
In 'Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-kangaroos'. (Eds
G Grigg, P Jarman and I Hume) pp. 151-168.
(Surrey Beatty Sons Sydney)
11How do grazers deal with grass?
Example eastern grey kangaroos Macropus
giganteus
Sanson GD (1989) Morphological adaptations of
teeth to diets and feeding in the Macropodoidea.
In 'Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-kangaroos'. (Eds
G Grigg, P Jarman and I Hume) pp. 151-168.
(Surrey Beatty Sons Sydney)
12How do grazers deal with grass?
Elephants also have molar progression
13How do grazers deal with grass?
Example grazing zebra wildebeest
- Select suitable plant parts for guts and teeth
Krebs 2001, Fig 14.10
14How do browsers deal with browse?
structural
chemical
Grasses Forbs Trees/shrubs
15How do browsers deal with browse?
Example koalas Phascolarctos cinereus
- e.g. eucalypt terpene p-cymene
- metabolise p-cymene enzymes oxidise it
- ? more polar
- ? excretion in urine
Boyle R., McLean S., Foley W. J., Moore B. D.,
Davies N. W. Brandon S. (2000) Fate of the
dietary terpene, p-cymene, in the male koala. J.
Chem. Ecol., 26, 1095-1111.
16How do browsers deal with browse?
Modified from McArthur C., Hagerman A. E.
Robbins C. T. (1991) Physiological strategies of
mammalian herbivores against plant defenses. In
Plant Defenses Against Mammalian Herbivores (eds
R. T. Palo C. T. Robbins) pp. 103-114. CRC
Press, Boca Raton, Florida.
17Main questions
- How do plants defend themselves from herbivores?
- Which plants use what defences?
- How do herbivores counteract plant defences?
- What are the consequences of these interactions
on feeding patterns in herbivores?
18Feeding patterns of grazers?
- Diet quality
- low
- medium
- high
Bell R. H. V. (1971) A grazing ecosystem in the
Serengeti. Sci. Amer., 225, 86-93.
19Feeding patterns of grazers?
Bell R. H. V. (1971) A grazing ecosystem in the
Serengeti. Sci. Amer., 225, 86-93.
20Feeding patterns of grazers?
- Zebra remove bulky low quality parts, for ?
- Wildebeest remove medium quality parts, for
? - Thomsons gazelle select rarer nutritious bits
- Grazing facilitation?
Bell R. H. V. (1971) A grazing ecosystem in the
Serengeti. Sci. Amer., 225, 86-93.
21Feeding patterns of grazers?
Hypothesis Grazing facilitation
Prediction ? zebra ? ? wildebeest ? ? Thomsons
gazelle (?)
- Not as predicted ?
- No grazing facilitation?
- ?
- 3 independent plant-herbivore interactions?
22Feeding patterns of generalist browsers?
Hypothesis MUST mix diet (to deal with PSMs)
Prediction 1 Intake on Diet1 PSM1 OR Diet2
PSM2 ? Diet3 Diet1 Diet2
- Feeding trial
- 6 brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula)
- 3 diets
- Diet 1 cineole (terpene)
- Diet 2 gallic acid (phenolic)
- Diet 3 Diet 1 and Diet 2 (side by side)
- Measure intake
- Film feeding behaviour
Wiggins N. L., McArthur C., McLean S. Boyle R.
(2003) Effects of two plant secondary
metabolites, cineole and gallic acid, on nightly
feeding patterns of the common brushtail possum.
Journal of Chemical Ecology, 29, 1423-1441.
23Feeding patterns of generalist browsers?
Prediction 1 Intake on Diet1 PSM1 OR Diet2
PSM2 ? Diet3 Diet1 Diet2
Wiggins N. L., McArthur C., McLean S. Boyle R.
(2003) Effects of two plant secondary
metabolites, cineole and gallic acid, on nightly
feeding patterns of the common brushtail possum.
Journal of Chemical Ecology, 29, 1423-1441.
24Feeding patterns of generalist browsers?
- Prediction 2 Feeding patterns differ?
- How much they ate per feeding bout
Wiggins N. L., McArthur C., McLean S. Boyle R.
(2003) Effects of two plant secondary
metabolites, cineole and gallic acid, on nightly
feeding patterns of the common brushtail possum.
Journal of Chemical Ecology, 29, 1423-1441.
25Feeding patterns of generalist browsers?
- Prediction 2 Feeding patterns differ?
- How quickly they ate
Wiggins N. L., McArthur C., McLean S. Boyle R.
(2003) Effects of two plant secondary
metabolites, cineole and gallic acid, on nightly
feeding patterns of the common brushtail possum.
Journal of Chemical Ecology, 29, 1423-1441.
26Feeding patterns of generalist browsers?
Hypothesis MUST mix diet (to deal with PSMs)
Prediction 3 foraging efficiency related to
scale of plant species diversity
Better for generalist?
Better for specialist?
McArthur C(unpubl.)
27Main points
- Plant-herbivore interactions
- Variety of plant types
- Variety of defences
- Variety of herbivore feeding niches
- Counteracting plant defences
- Behavioural
- Physiological
- Physical
- Feeding patterns affected by
- interaction with plant defences
- competition
- predation
28Summary
- Interactions affecting distribution abundance
of animals include - Competition
- Predator-prey
- Plant-herbivore
- Research questions across interactions
- Some similar
- Some different
- Depends on
- Our current state of understanding
- Time subject has been studied?
- Complexity of problem?