Title: Community ecology
1Community ecology
- Outline
- Community structure attributes
- Factors influencing the structure of communities
- Community dynamics
- Chapter 16-18
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3Community attributes
- of species
- Relative abundance of species
- Nature of species interactions (food webs)
- Physical structure
4Community structure
- Species richness ( of species within community)
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5Community structure
- Relative abundance ( each species contributes to
the total number of individuals)
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7Stand one
Stand two
8Simpsons diversity index
- D 0 - 1
- 0 high diversity
- 1 low diversity
- Stand one (Table 16.1) D0.13
- Stand two (Table 16.2) D0.36
9Dominance
Yellow-poplar
10Food webs
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12Keystone species
13Functional groups
- Feeding level
- Exploitation of common resources (guilds)
- Photosynthetic pathway
- Shade tolerance
- Life history
14Physical structure
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16Zonation
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18supratidal
intertidal
subtidal
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22Association
- Relatively consistent species composition
- Uniform general appearance
- Distribution that is characteristic of a
particular habitat
23Organismic concept of communities
24Continuum concept of communities
25Factors controlling community structure
26Fundamental niche
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29Species interactions
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31Keystone predation
32Apparent competition
33Indirect commensalism
34Top-down vs. bottom-up control
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36The number of trophic levels regulates plant,
herbivore and carnivore numbers
trophic levels
B/comp numbers limited by availability of
resources (bottom-up regulation). Competition
strong, predation weak. T/pred numbers limited
by predation (top-down regulation). Competition
weak, predation strong.
37Stress tolerance and competition
38Black needle rush
Salt meadow cordgrass
Smooth cordgrass
39Environmental heterogeneity
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41Relationship between the number of plants per
300m2 plot beside the hood river, NWT, and an
index (ranging from 0 to 1) of spatial
heterogeneity in abiotic factors associated with
topography and soil. More spatially
heterogeneous plots had higher species richness.
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43Environmental quality
44Plant species diversity in a control plot and a
fertilized plot in the Parkgrass experiment in
Rothamstead, England. Fertilized plots have
lower species diversity. The Parkgrass
experiment, which began in 1856, is the longest
running ecological experiment.
45Community stability
- Types of stability
- Resilient community returns to former state
after disturbance - Resistant community changes little in response
to disturbance
46Community dynamics Succession
47Primary succession
Pioneer species
Late successional species
48Secondary succession
49beach grass
shrubs
pines
oak
50Primary succession newly exposed substrate
51Dryas sp.
An early succession species on glacial moraines
in Glacier bay. Dryas is a symbiotic N-fixing
plant
52Salix arctica
Populus trichocarpa
After Dryas, cottonwood and willows become
established
53Alnus incana
Alders become the dominant tree after 50 years
54 Climax mixed spruce-hemlock forest
55Secondary succession after disturbance
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58Autogenic vs. allogenic change
Density
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61Allogenic environmental change
62Species diversity during succession
Oak-pine forest
63Intermediate disturbance hypothesis
64Intermediate disturbance hypothesis
High
Low
65In New Zealand streams, less disturbed sites
support more complex communities (i.e.,
communities with larger, more connected food webs)
66Succession of heterotrophs
Bark beetle/wood-boring beetle
Invertebrates/mice/salamanders
Predatory insects
Moss and lichen
Fungi/bacteria
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68Changes over geologic time
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71Concept of community revisited
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73Concept of community revisited
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