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Chapter 4: Biological Communities and Species Interactions

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Title: Chapter 4: Biological Communities and Species Interactions


1
Chapter 4 Biological Communities and Species
Interactions
  • Understand the fundamental factors driving
    community development

2
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • A. Critical Factors and Tolerance Limits
  • Examples of limiting conditions are temperature,
    moisture levels, nutrient supply, and soil
  • Liebigs principle (law) states, the single
    factor in shortest supply relative to demand is
    the critical determinant to species distribution
  • Called the principle of limiting factors

3
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • A. (cont)
  • Shelford used Liebigs principle to formulate
    that there are maximums and minimums for
    environmental factors (resources)
  • Called tolerance limits
  • Zones of intolerance are areas of species
    extinctions in that habitat
  • The factor closest to the zone of intolerance
    determines where an organism can survive
  • Sometimes called Shelfords Law

4
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5
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • A. (cont)
  • Some variations of the 2 rules exist
  • Could be multiple factors working together to
    limit distribution
  • Some organisms have a specific critical factor
  • Passenger Pigeons (land), Saguaro Cacti (cold)
  • Some limitations may occur during a specific
    portion of the life cycle
  • Desert Pupfish (temperature and salinity levels
    for juveniles only)

6
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • A (cont)
  • Indicator species are species with defined
    tolerance limits and are used to indicate the
    health of the habitat
  • For some, if missing there is a problem
  • For some, if present there is a problem
  • Environmental indicators are species of organisms
    which can give specific information about a
    habitat
  • May indicate specific nutrients present or
    missing
  • May indicate pollution

7
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • B. Natural Selection, Adaptation, and Evolution
  • 1. General Information
  • Organisms adapt to special conditions
  • One form of adaptation is acclimation
  • Organisms experiences physiological modifications
    or changes
  • Non-permanent, reversible
  • Another form is genetic, part of evolution
  • Will change the population
  • Inheritance of specific traits
  • Natural selection allows the organism best
    suited for an environment to reproduce

8
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9
Darwins Finches
10
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • B. (cont)
  • Acts on pre-existing genetic diversity
  • Mutations can add to the genetic diversity
  • Genes that suit the environment will become the
    dominant trait over time
  • Darwins finches is a good example
  • Common, general ancestor becoming specialized
    multiple current species
  • Also called selective pressure

11
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • B. (cont)
  • Factors affecting selective pressure are
  • Physiological stress due to inappropriate levels
    of some critical factors
  • Predation, parasitism and disease
  • Competition
  • Luck?
  • Geologic isolation can aid in different gene
    expression
  • Possibly leading to speciation

12
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • B. (cont)
  • Natural Selection and Adaptation can cause
    similar species or 2 groups of the same species
    to drift genetically apart
  • Called Divergent Evolution
  • Natural Selection and Adaptation can cause 2
    different species to drift genetically together
    (considered the same species)
  • They look and act alike
  • Called Convergent Evolution

13
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14
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • C. The Ecological Niche
  • 1. General Information
  • Habitat is the place where an organism lives
  • Ecological niche is a description of the role of
    a species in a biological community
  • Niches can change as physical characteristics
    change

15
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • C. (cont)
  • 2. Law of competitive exclusion
  • States that no two species will occupy the same
    niche and compete fro exactly the same resources
    in the same habitat (for a long period of time)
  • Creates niche specialization, which creates
    behavioral separation, when two niches overlap

16
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17
Paramecium Graph
18
Resource partitioning and niche specialization
19
I. Who Lives Where and Why?
  • C. (cont)
  • 2 (cont)
  • The number of niches is determined by the
    resources and the extent by which they can be
    separated
  • Some animals can share resources, but use them at
    different times
  • Ex. Owls and Hawks, Bats and Mockingbirds
  • Some animals can use the same resources, but use
    different portions of the same resource
  • Ex. Finches, MacArthur's Warblers, Flickers and
    Woodpeckers

20
MacArthur's Warblers Splitting the same resource
21
Left to right Cape May, Yellow-rumped,
Black-throated Green, Blackburnian, and
Bay-breasted Warblers. Black areas in stylized
conifers show where feeding is concentrated.
22
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • A. Predation
  • An organism that feeds directly on another
    organism (living)
  • Yes, Herbivores are predators!
  • Scavengers, detritovores and decomposers (that
    feed on dead organisms) are NOT predators
  • Parasites? , pathogens
  • Predation is an influence on population balance
    in a community

23
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • A. (cont.)
  • Involves 3 scenerios
  • 1. Influences all stages of the life cycle for
    both predators and prey
  • 2. influences food obtaining mechanisms
  • Influences prey- predator adaptations to resist
    or encourage predation
  • As prey species mature, the predators change
  • As predators mature, the prey species change
  • Tend to be the most successful with the old and
    the young (book says least fit)
  • Some prey have created defenses
  • Spines, thorns, thicker bark, poisonous chemical
    mimicry, speed, etc

24
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • B. Keystone Species
  • A species or group of species whose impact on its
    community is much larger and more influential
    than would be expected from mere abundance
  • At one time they were thought to be top predators
  • May be a species that has a significant impact on
    other organisms
  • Ex tropical figs, sea otters, prairie dogs

25
Keystone Species Prairie Dogs
26
Keystone Species Sea Otters
27
Keystone Species American Beaver
28
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • B. (cont.)
  • In some conditions microscopic organisms may be
    the keystone species
  • Ex mycorrhzae (root fungus)
  • C. Competition
  • When organisms compete over resources
  • 2 types
  • Interspecific between organisms of different
    species
  • Intraspecific- between organisms of the same
    species

29
Interspecific Competition
30
Intraspecific Competition Territories
31
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • C. (cont.)
  • Interspecific competition is responsible for
    niche specificity
  • Physically designed to tolerate conditions,
    acquire foods, and reproduce at a time different
    from competitors
  • Animal kingdoms arms race
  • Bigger, stronger, faster, and smarter
  • Avoids fighting as much as possible
  • Where 2 different species that occupy the same
    niche compete in a habitat, one species will out
    compete the other

32
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • C. (cont)
  • Described as the Lotka-Volterra Competition Model
  • Mathematical equations to predict which species
    will out compete the other
  • Depends on 2 factors
  • 1. The number of individuals of species 2
    present and (2) the intensity of the
    interference with species 1s growth or the
    intensity of the competition of species 2 on
    species 1
  • It will be a negative factor

33
Lotka-Volterra Competition Model
34
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • C. (cont.)
  • Intraspecific competition is more intense
  • Battling with organisms with the exact same set
    of needs
  • Plants have to battle with mature adults
  • Adaptive tendencies lead to greater dispersal of
    seeds
  • Territories are a direct result of intraspecific
    competition

35
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • C. (cont.)
  • Battle for an area with all of the needs of the
    organism at all stages of the life cycle
  • Those animals without all either dont reproduce
    or dont reproduce successfully
  • D. Symbiosis
  • Interactions between species
  • Not always antagonistic
  • Intimate living together of members of two or
    more species

36
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • D. (cont.)
  • 4 types of symbiosis
  • Commensalism- one benefits while another has no
    apparent effect
  • Mutualism- both organisms benefit
  • Predator/Prey- one benefits while the other dies
  • Parasitism- one benefits the other has no effect
    or bad effect

37
II. Species Interactions and Population Dynamics
  • E. Defensive Mechanisms
  • Toxic chemicals, body armor, similar coloration,
    and others to defend against predation
  • Poison ivy, thorns
  • Batesian mimicry
  • Mullerian mimicry, 2 different species
    unpalatable and dangerous looking very similar

38
III. Community Properties
  • General Information
  • Try to understand the factors which make up the
    properties involving communities
  • Productivity, diversity, complexity, resilience,
    stability, and structure
  • A. Productivity
  • Photosynthetic rates are regulated by light
    levels, temperature, moisture, and nutrient
    availability.

39
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40
III. Community Properties
  • A. (cont.)
  • Corn and sugar cane under ideal conditions, in
    the tropics can approach productivity as high as
    the rain forest
  • A very small amount of available sunlight is
    captured by photosynthetic communities
  • B. Abundance and Diversity
  • Abundance is the total number of organisms of a
    species in an area

41
III. Community Properties
  • B. (cont.)
  • Diversity is the number of different species in
    an area
  • Abundance and diversity are inversely related
  • High abundance means low diversity
  • High diversity means low abundance
  • Diversity decreases away from the equator and
    toward the poles

42
III. Community Properties
  • B. (cont.)
  • Abundance increases away from the equator and
    toward the poles
  • Diversities decreases moving upward in attitude
  • C. Complexity and Connectedness
  • Complexity is the number of species at each
    trophic level and the number of trophic levels in
    a community

43
III. Community Properties
  • C. (cont.)
  • A diverse community may not be a complex
    community
  • Tropical rainforests have many trophic levels
    that are compartmentalized
  • Called guilds
  • Species that occupy the same trophic level
  • Fruit enters, leaf nibbles, seed gnawers, etc

44
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45
III. Community Properties
  • D. Resilience and Stability
  • 3 Types
  • 1. constancy, lacks fluctuations in composition
    and function
  • 2. inertia, which indicates resistance to
    perturbations
  • 3. renewal, which is the ability to repair damage
    after disturbances

46
III. Community Properties
  • D. (cont)
  • MacArthur believed the more complex a community
    the more stable and resilient the community will
    be when disturbed (studies show no real
    consistency with this conclusion)
  • Disturbances are based on the organism
  • Ex. Earthquakes, flooding, traveling, spitting,
    etc.

47
III. Community Properties
  • E. Edges and Boundaries
  • Areas between 2 adjacent and different
    communities
  • Edge effect is the relationship of communities
    and the organisms that inhabit the edge of the 2
    communities or habitats
  • Considered secondary habitats
  • Some boundaries are sharp and distinct, called
    edges

48
III. Community Properties
  • E. (cont)
  • When the 2 habitats or communities blend
    together, it is called a boundary
  • Edges and boundaries are also called Ecotones
  • Sharp divisions are called closed communities
  • Boundary divisions where many species cross are
    called open communities
  • Adjacent communities may be important for species
    that need both types during different stages of
    development in the life cycle

49
IV. Communities in Transition
  • A. Ecological Succession
  • Transition of communities in an area over time
  • 2 types
  • Primary Succession development starts with a
    site that is newly broken rock or an area
    unoccupied previously by organisms
  • Starts with pioneer species, such as lichens and
    bacteria

50
IV. Communities in Transition
  • A. (cont)
  • Secondary Succession an existing community is
    disrupted and a new, previous, community
    redevelops in the habitat or community
  • Caused by wildfires, or farmland restoration
  • Starts with weeds or grasses, when dealing with a
    fire (depends on the severity of the fire)
  • Starts with grasses and shrubs when dealing with
    overgrown farmland

51
IV. Communities in Transition
  • A. (cont)
  • Typical primary succession
  • Rocks, lichens, weeds, grasses, shrubs, conifers,
    deciduous trees (TDF)
  • Typical secondary succession
  • Climax community, fire, weeds, grasses, shrubs,
    coniferous trees, deciduous trees
  • May be much faster and may skip some steps,
    depending on what community surrounds the fire
    area and what plants are ready to spread seeds
    into the open area

52
IV. Communities in Transition
  • B. Introduced Species and Community Change
  • Introduced species are non-native species
  • They can replace existing organisms or (by out
    competing them for the same resources) or
  • They can wipe out an unintended species
  • Ex. Mongooses in Hawaii
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