Title: Crotalus atrox
1(No Transcript)
2Crotalus atrox
Crotalus molossus
Crotalus scutulatus
3Species 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.
4- Intertidal zone communities. H1 (Connell) --
both high and low levels of disturbance will
reduce diversity.
5The 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.
6Disturbance 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.
7Disturbance 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.
8Community 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.
9Antarctic pelagic food web
Subdivisions 1. Top predators 2. Basal
species 3. Intermediate species
Links
Levels
85 sp.
10- Food web generalizations
- 1. Food chains are short.
- Mean trophic levels from top predator to
producers is ca. 5. (10 max.)
11- 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
12Boreal forest (N Canada)
13- 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
14- Food webs
- Possible interactions ( species)2
- Connectance actual interactions / possible
interactions - 10/49 0.20
15Community 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.
16What is 1. a parasitoid? 2. a hyperparsitoid?
Guild
Guilds
Resource
17Food 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
18 Response, decline in species richness 5 years
19How to recognize a keystone species
- Exceptionally strong effects on community
structure despite low biomass
20Keystone species
212nd level Predators
1st level Predators
Herbivores
Trophic cascade effect on primary production
Reference