Title: Ecological Communities species diversity and community structure
1Ecological Communities-species diversity and
community structure
2Ecological communities are often highly complex
3Questions about food webs and ecological
communities
- Why are there so many species?
- What contributes to ecosystem stability?
- What factors determine patterns of species
diversity?
4First-some basic definitions
- Community two or more populations that live in
the same geographic area - Food chain a sequence of organisms through which
energy flows - Food web a series of interconnected food chains
5Ecological communities are often highly complex
6Species diversity
- Early ecologists were puzzled by the diversity of
species - If competition was so prevalent shouldnt the
best adapted species out-compete the others? - In early lab experiments, Gause inoculated
experimental ecosystems with pairs of organisms - One species eventually took over and eliminated
the other - Which species prevailed depended on the initial
densities
7Competitive exclusion
- Term used to describe this process
- If competitive exclusion occurred in the lab, why
are there so many species in the wild? - G. R. Hutchinson (1959) asked Why are there so
many kinds of animals? in the title of a famous
paper
8The answer to this question
- Is complex
- And has a direct bearing on much of the practical
conservation work that will face us over the next
several decades - Still the subject of a great deal of research
- Theoretical modeling
- Empirical research
9Before we examine examples
- We need to define species diversity
- We need to understand how it is measured in the
field
10Species diversity has two components
- Species richness
- The total number of different species
- Species evenness
- Measure of the relative proportions of the
different species
11Species diversity has two components
- Two communities
- Community A
- 1 Red-winged blackbird
- 9 Marsh wrens
- Community B
- 5 Red-winged blackbirds
- 5 Marsh wrens
- Species richness (number of different species)
- Equal for the two communities
- Species evenness
- Evenness is higher in community B
- Community B is more diverse
12Diversity indices
- A variety of indices have be developed to measure
species diversity - They incorporate both the richness and evenness
components of species diversity - Example Shannon-Weaver diversity index
- s
- H - S pilnpi
- i1
13Species diversity in fertilized and unfertilized
fields
14Factors influencing species diversity include
- Area
- Latitudinal gradients
- Productivity
- Habitat diversity
15Island Biogeography
- Some of the early attempts to understand species
diversity and the effects of area focussed on the
study of diversity patterns on islands
16Species diversity on islands
17Numbers of plant genera
18Area effects may be due to
- increased habitat diversity as area increases
- the effects of area itself
- Larger target of colonizers to find
- Lower extinction rates for larger populations on
large islands
19Island Biogeography
- The study of patterns of species diversity and
community structure on islands - Is important when considering the design of
nature reserves - Nature reserves can often be thought of as
islands of protected habitat in a sea of urban or
agricultural landscapes - Island biogeography can also be applied to forest
patches in an urban landscape etc.
20Conservation biologists
- Must decide whether to protect a small number of
large areas - Or a large number of small areas
- The best approach will depend on the species that
the reserves are designed to protect
21Making the best decision requires
- Information about species area relationships
- Home range requirements
- Dispersal ability
- Extinction probabilities
22Species area relationships
- Also have implications for measuring and
comparing species diversity at different sites - As sampling time, effort, or area searched
increases so does the number of species detected
23Area effects
Cumulative of species
24Species area curves
25Species area curves correct sampling design
26Species area curves incorrect sampling design
27Latitudinal gradients
28Latitudinal gradients
29Nutrients and productivity
- Based on theoretical models
- some have argued that as net primary productivity
increases, species diversity should increase - others have argued that as net primary
productivity increases, species diversity or
richness should decrease
30Net primary productivity
- Is the rate of production of new biomass per
individual (or area) per unit time - e.g. 1100g C /ha/Yr
- Or 50 g C/plant/year
- The rate at which nutrients and energy is
converted to biomass
31Theoretical arguments for increasing species
richness with increasing productivity
- As the number of species increases, so does the
probability of including a highly productive
species, i.e. one that is very efficient at
converting nutrients into biomass - of species is driving the rate primary
production, i.e., more species greater
productivity
32Theoretical arguments for increasing species
richness with increasing productivity
Complementary resource use
- As the number of species increases, so does the
probability of including species that can use all
the resources - i.e. if only one species were present, some
niches would remain unoccupied and resources
would remain unused
33Evidence
- Support for the hypothesis that species diversity
increases as productivity increases - Tilman and Downing examined species richness and
productivity in plots they fertilized with N - After severe drought productivity declined less
in high diversity plots - Productivity also recovered more quickly in high
diversity plots - These results suggest that the of species is
driving productivity
34Contd
- Naeem (1994,1995, 1996) compared productivity in
- High and low diversity plant communities
- Low diversity communities were subsets of the
high diversity - Productivity was highest in the high diversity
communities
35Increasing diversity as productivity decreases
- As latitude decreased so does primary net
productivity - Tropical forests have low net primary
productivity and high species diversity - Temperate forests have intermediate net primary
productivity and low species diversity
36This seems counter intuitive
- But new production in tropical forests are
minimal - Soil is nutrient poor
- Nutrients are tied up in standing crop
37Increasing diversity as latitude (productivity)
decreased
38Pattern holds for a variety of taxa
- Birds
- Bats
- Mammals
- Insects
- Plants
39Explaination
- May be that low productivity means that
succession and competitive exclusion occur slowly - Eventually disturbance resets succession
40Effect of habitat diversity
41Niche theory
- Proposes that different species have different
ecological requirements and tolerances - Each occupying a different ecological niche
- Many species co-occur because they occupy
different niches - They can out-compete competitors in their
preferred niche but are poor competitors outside
their preferred conditions
42MacArthurBird species diversity
- Argued that forests with more complex physical
structures should have more available niches - He correlated foliage height diversity with bird
species diversity
43Foliage height diversity vs bird species
44Patterns of species diversity
- Influenced by several factors including
- Area
- Habitat diversity
- Productivity