Title: 14.4 Interactions Within Communities
114.4 Interactions Within Communities
- The theory that two species with similar
requirements cannot coexist in the same community
was proposed by Gause
2- - Habitat the food, water, shelter and space
requirements determining where an organism lives,
its "address - - Niche the role of the organism in its
environment where it lives, and how it "fits in"
to the community structure, its "job"
3- Human populations are theoretically capable of
living anywhere on this planet with abundant
resources and no competition. This is a statement
of our fundamental niche - Humans do not make use of the total space
available to live on the planet and find
themselves crowded into smaller areas than
theoretically possible. This is a statement of
our realized niche.
4- In many ways, a science classroom can be
considered a model of an ecosystem. The students
rely on the teacher for knowledge and guidance
the teacher would not have a job without the
students. Neither can exist without the other.
Ecologically, this relationship demonstrates
mutualism. - In many ways, a science classroom can be
considered a model of an ecosystem. A student
copies another student's work, contributing
nothing. The student who did the work feels hurt
and used. Ecologically, this relationship can be
described as parasitism.
5- An ecological relationship between two species,
where one species benefits and the other is
harmed is either parasitism or predation
6resource partitioning may increase the chance of
species success.
- - the occupying of non-overlapping niches by
organisms requiring similar resources - - reduces competition, making resources
available
7character displacement may provide a survival
advantage
- - traits of species occupying the same
geographic range are more different than traits
in the same species geographically separated - - reduces competition by letting species sharing
a region to occupy different niches
8It can be argued that, while not good for the
victim, predation has a positive effect on the
prey species.
- - predators remove the old, weak, and unhealthy,
raising the general strength of the population -
- - predators help prevent the prey species from
exceeding their food supply
9Prey species often develop passive defense
mechanisms that reduce the chance of them being
eaten.
- - morphological (e.g., spines, hooks, needles,
etc.) - - chemical ( taste, toxic, smell, etc.)
- - camouflage
- - hiding
- - mimicking dangerous species
10- The coral snake and the king snake are very
difficult to tell apart. One is poisonous, the
other is not. This is an example camouflage
11- When attacked, the sea cucumber ejects its
intestines. The predator attacks these allowing
the animal an opportunity to escape. It will grow
a new digestive system. This is an example of
active defence
12Commensalism - some biologists argue that it does
not exist
- - a relationship in which one organism benefits,
and the other is unaffected - - very difficult to determine if "unaffected"
species benefits, is harmed or is truly not
affected without direct observation -
- Hermit crabs live in shells left when snails
die. The shell provides protection for the crab.
This is an example of commensalisms and a defence
mechanism
13- Termites eat wood, but cannot digest cellulose.
In their gut live a protist that can digest
cellulose, but is unable to survive outside the
termite. If the protists are removed, the termite
will starve. This is an example of obligatory
mutualism
14- Organisms introduced into a region that is not
their natural habitat and in which they have few
natural predators are known to ecologists as
exotics or nonindigenous species - Nonindigenous species presently causing concern
by affecting naturally-occurring species in
Ontario include purple loosestrife and zebra
mussels.
15Purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria., a
European perennial, is establishing populations
in aquatic ecosystems in North America, where it
is disrupting interactions between native
species. Researchers at the University of Guelph
are studying a European beetle as a method of
biological control.a. What general assumptions
are being made concerning the European beetle?
- - beetles eat purple loosestrife
- - beetles do not eat native plants
- - beetles are not harmful to native animals
16b. What will happen to the beetle population if
it is successful in controlling loosestrife?
- - as loosestrife population declines, beetle
population declines - - beetles will not start to eat native plant
species
17c. Describe the ecological concerns if the
assumptions prove to be incorrect.
- - beetles will eat native plants, interfering
with interactions between native species - - beetles will over-populate, there being no
natural predators - - one problem will have been traded for another