Title: Interactions within Communities
1Interactions within Communities
2- Populations of different species interact in a
community - Some organisms rely on other organisms within the
community for survival
3Ecological Niches
- An organisms ecological characteristics,
including use of and interaction with abiotic and
biotic resources within its environment - Think of a habitat being ones address and its
ecological niche as its occupation - e.g. a lions niche includes what it eats, what
eats it, the way it reproduces, the temperature
range it tolerates, its habitat, behavioural
responses, and all other factors that can
describe its pattern of living
4Ecological Niches
- A Fundamental niche is the biological
characteristics of the organism and the set of
resources individuals in the population are
theoretically capable of using under ideal
conditions - Realized niche the biological characteristics
of the organism and the resources individuals in
a population actually use under the prevailing
environmental conditions
5Interspecific competition
- Interaction between individuals of different
species for essential common resource(s) that are
in limited supply - serves to restrict population growth
- Can occur in two ways
- Interference competition involves aggression
between individuals of different species who
fight over the same resource(s) - Exploitative competition involves consumption
of shared resources by individuals of different
species, where consumption by one limits the
resource availability to the other species
6Interspecific competition
-
- Gauses Principle
- competitive exclusion
- No two species with similar requirements could
coexist in exactly the same niche indefinitely - Population of weaker competitor can decline
- One species could change its behaviour to survive
using different resources - One population could migrate to another habitat
-
7Resource partitioning
- Avoidance of/reduction in competition for similar
resources by individuals of different species
occupying different non-overlapping ecological
niches
8Lake Malawi Cichlids
- 850 species from one ancestor!!
9Mimicry
- Batesian mimicry
- Palatable / harmless species mimics
unpalatable/harmful organism - Mullerian mimicry
- Several animal species resemble one another and
are all poisonous or dangerous
10Predation
- interspecific interaction by which population
density of one species (predator) increases while
population density of other species (prey)
declines - time lags exist between responses to predator
prey interactions and their population sizes - sinusoidal curves exist in some predator-prey
relationships
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12Defence Mechanisms - Plants
- plants use both morphological defences
- thorns, hooks, spines, needles
- chemical defences
- the defensive systems in plants act as selective
agents which initiate the evolution of
counter-adaptations in herbivore populations - these changes brought about by co-evolution
between plants and insets can affect competition
13Defence Mechanisms - Animals
- sometimes employ passive defence mechanisms
- e.g. hiding
- others employ active defence mechanisms
- e.g. fleeing
- more costly to prey in terms of energy uses
- other effective behavioural defences exist
- e.g. alarm calls
- e.g. camouflage (cryptic colouration)
- e.g. visual warnings in terms of chemical
defences
14Symbiosis
- Some organisms have obligatory mutualism
- neither organism could grow or reproduce without
each other
15Mutualism
- Mutualism A symbiotic relationship in which
both species benefit.
16Mutualism
- Examples
- Cowbirds and Large Animals
- Termites and Trichonympha
- Bees and Flowers
17Cowbirds and Large Animals
The cowbird benefits by eating the ticks and
mites off the large animal. The large animal
benefits from have the parasites removed from
them. The birds can also warn them of danger.
18Termites and Trichonympha
- You probably think termites eat wood they doin
a way. - Termites cant digest cellulose, which is the
main component of wood. - Therefore, they get help from a protozoan called
trichonympha. - This protozoan lives in the gut of the termite.
It breaks down the cellulose for the termite.
The trichonympha gets a free meal and shelter
the termite is able to eat and receive nutrients
from the wood.
19Termite and Trichonympha
20Trichonympha
21Bees and Pollen
- Bees receive nectar from the flowers in order to
make honey. As the bees collect nectar, they
collect pollen on their body. As they fly to
another flower, they pollinate it by dusting the
pollen on the flowers stamen.
22Commensalism
- Commensalism A symbiotic relationship in which
one organism benefits and the other is not
affected.
Examples Clown fish and sea anemones Shark and
remora
23Clown Fish and Sea Anemones
The clown fish is immune to the stings of the sea
anemones tentacles. The clown fish makes its
home in the tentacles for protection. The clown
fish gets shelter, but the sea anemone gets
nothing.
24Shark and Remora
The remora hangs around the shark picking up any
scraps it may leave. The remora gets food while
the shark gets nothing.
25Parasitism
- Parasitism A symbiotic relationship in which
one organism benefits but the other is harmed.
26Parasitism
- one organism benefits at the expense of another
organism which is usually harmed - Parasites can be
- Microparasites microscopic in size with rapid
reproduction rate (blood protozoans) - Macroparasites larger organisms (tapeworms)
- Endoparasites live inside the body of their
host - Ectoparasites live and feed on the outside
surface of their host (lice) - Social parasites manipulate the social behaviour
of another species so that they can complete
their life cycle
27Parasitism
- Examples
- Tapeworm and Humans
- Cuckoo bird and warbler
- Ticks
28Tapeworm and Humans
29Tapeworms and Humans
30Tapeworms and Humans
31Tapeworms and Humans
32Cuckoo birds and warblers
33Cuckoo and Warbler
34Ticks
35Tick
36Even Athletes foot is a parasite
37Parasitism
38Parasitism
39Symbiosis
40Disruption of Community Equilibrium
- interspecific interactions help maintain
necessary equilibrium within complex and dynamic
natural systems that sustain communities - A variety of disturbances affect this equilibrium
- natural disasters
- introduction of nonindigenous species
- human influences
- HOMEWORK P688 1-7