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Crotalus atrox

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In general, species are adapted to average environmental conditions. ... Burrowing mammals; e.g., prairie dogs & gophers. Until 1919: occupancy of c. 40 million ha ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Crotalus atrox


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Crotalus atrox
Crotalus molossus
Crotalus scutulatus
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Species diversity and disturbance
  • In general, species are adapted to average
    environmental conditions.
  • However, all environments have periodic
    disturbances varying in frequency and intensity.
  • Disturbances affect species diversity.
  • Principle intermediate levels of disturbance
    increases species diversity.

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  • Intertidal zone communities. H1 (Connell) --
    both high and low levels of disturbance will
    reduce diversity.

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The test of the hypothesis
  • Effects of disturbance on algae and invertebrate
    diversity
  • Intertidal rocks (substrate)
  • Disturbance large waves from winter storms.
  • Level of disturbance depends on wave size and
    rock size.
  • Small rocks (much disturbance) large rocks
    (little disturbance).
  • Rocks supporting greatest diversity of species
    were those subjected to intermediate levels of
    disturbance.
  • These were intermediate sized rocks.

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Disturbance and Diversity in the Intertidal Zone
Explanation Low frequency disturbance time
for dominant species to displace other
species. High frequency disturbance difficult
for all but a few species to colonize the rocks.
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Disturbance and diversity N.A. temperate
grasslands
  • Biotic sources of disturbance
  • Burrowing mammals e.g., prairie dogs gophers
  • Until 1919 occupancy of c. 40 million ha
  • Extensive burrow systems (towns) with a dynamic
    border and various ages of mounds piles of
    excavated soil around burrow entrances
  • open to colonization by r-selected species.
  • Intermediate levels of disturbance prevents
    either colonizers or dominant plants for
    exclusion.
  • Extermination programs simplify plant communities.

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Community Organization
  • 1. Trophic levels (functional organization)
  • Patterns of energy flow who eats whom
  • Each community will have a pattern of energy
    transfer called a food web.

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Antarctic pelagic food web
Subdivisions 1. Top predators 2. Basal
species 3. Intermediate species
Links
Levels
85 sp.
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  • Food web generalizations
  • 1. Food chains are short.
  • Mean trophic levels from top predator to
    producers is ca. 5. (10 max.)

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  • 2. On average, the number of connections (links)
    among species increases as species richness
    increases.
  • e.g., an estuary in NE Scotland
  • 95 species and 5,518 food chain links

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Boreal forest (N Canada)
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  • 3. Proportions of predators are nearly constant
    regardless of web size.
  • Approximately 1 predator 2-3 prey species.

92 freshwater invertebrate food
webs prey/predator 21 3.51
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  • Food webs
  • Possible interactions ( species)2
  • Connectance actual interactions / possible
    interactions
  • 10/49 0.20

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Community Organization
  • 2. Guilds (functional organization)
  • Guild a group of species exploiting a common
    energy source in a similar fashion.
  • Ecological units -- not taxonomic units.
  • i.e., functionally equivalent species are
    interchangeable (can replace one another in the
    guild).
  • Number of functional roles in a community is less
    than the number of species.
  • so, relative species abundance can change without
    affecting total biomass of the guild.

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What is 1. a parasitoid? 2. a hyperparsitoid?
Guild
Guilds
Resource
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Food Web Structure and Species Diversity
  • A community may be controlled by a single
    species.
  • Its activities determine the nature of the
    community.
  • Such species keystone species.
  • A keystone species will reduce the likelihood of
    competitive exclusion.
  • Decreasing competition increases the number of
    species that can coexist.
  • E.g., intertidal community
  • Experimental removal of a sea-star predator

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Response, decline in species richness 5 years
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How to recognize a keystone species
  • Exceptionally strong effects on community
    structure despite low biomass

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Keystone species
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2nd level Predators
1st level Predators
Herbivores
Trophic cascade effect on primary production
Reference
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