Title: Ecology and Biodiversity: definitions and levels of organization
1Ecology and Biodiversity definitions and levels
of organization
- BS 111
- Dr. Leanne Hepburn
2Course content
- Definitions, levels of organization
- Population ecology Population growth and life
tables Population regulation - Community Ecology Competition, predation and
other nteractions, population mismanagement - Behavioural ecology fixed action patterns and
learning Sociobiology - Ecosystem ecology Succession and zonation Energy
flow Nutrient cycling and pollution - Global ecology
- Organisms, light and radiation
- The atmosphere, climate and controlling factors
- Conservation Issues Conservation biology
Conservation in estuaries
3Reading List
- Essential
- Campbell Reece (2007) Biology. Benjamin
Cumming,8th edition - Additional
- Begon, M. Townsend, CR Harper, JL (2006)
Ecology from individuals to ecosystems.
Blackwell publishing. 4th edition. - Mackenzie, Ball Virdee (2005) Instant Notes in
Ecology,, BIOS - Beeby and Brennan, (2007) First Ecology
Ecological Principles and Environmental Issues.
Alan 2nd Edition. Oxford University Press. - Smithson, Addison and Atkinson (2002)
Fundamentals of the physical environment, 3rd
edition, Routledge.
4Suggested Essential Reading from the text books
- From Campbell Reece, Biology 8th Edition.
- Chapter 51, Animal behaviour
- Chapter 52, Intro to Ecology the Biosphere
- Chapter 53, Population Ecology
- Chapter 54, Community Ecology
- Chapter 55, Ecosystems
- Chapter 56, Conservation Biology Restoration
Ecology - From Beeby Brennan First Ecology these
sections of chapters are appropriate - 2.5, 3.2, 3.5, 4.3, 5.3, 6.1, 6.2, 6.3, 6.4, 7.1,
7.2. - From Mackenzie et al. Instant Notes in Ecology.
- C1, C2, D1, E1, E2, E3, F1, G1, W1, W2 W3
- If you would like more detailed information on
climate, weather and the physical environment,
then you could see - Smithson, Addison Atkinson, (2002) Fundamentals
of the Physical Environment, 3rd Edition,
Routledge. Several copies in the library, shelf
mark GB 55.
5Learning objectives Lectures 1/2
- explain the scope of ecology and the levels of
organization which it encompasses -
- explain the significance of ecology to human
concerns about the environment - explain the morphological species concept
- identify the parts of the scientific name of an
organism and write a scientific name in the
correct form - describe the extent of biodiversity as evidenced
by the number of species in the major groups - explain some of the methods used to estimate
species richness and use the method of
extrapolation from well studied groups to
calculate species richness - name the eight kingdoms, identify reasons why the
number of kingdoms has been increased from two to
eight and describe some of the reasons for
thinking there could be more than eight
6What is Ecology?
- The term "ecology" was introduced by Haeckel in
1869. His purpose was to focus attention on
relationships, especially relationships with the
environment, rather than on organisms and species
- ORGANISMS RELATIONSHIP WITH THE ENVIRONMENT
- Origin of word
- oikos the family household
- logy the study of
- Interesting parallel to economy management of
household - Many principles in common resource allocation,
cost-benefit ratios
7History of Ecological Thought
- From Thoreau to modern times
- Historically has been literature-based
appreciation of nature - Subsequently became more of a descriptive science
Henry David Thoreau, 1817-1862
8Darwinian References
- how infinitely complex and close-fitting are
the mutual relations of all organic beings to
each other and to their physical conditions of
life. - Origin of Species
9Definition of Ecology
- Ecology is the scientific study of the processes
regulating the distribution and abundance of
organisms and the interactions among them, and
the study of how these organisms in turn mediate
the transport and transformation of energy and
matter in the biosphere (i.e. the study of the
design of ecosystem structure and function). - (Jonathan Krebs, 1972)
10Cont.
- Ecology is the study of the interactions between
organisms and their environment - The effect of environment is both physical, (i.e.
temperature, water) and includes influences on
organisms by other organisms (i.e. interactions
biotic environment competition, predation) - The goal of ecology is to understand the
principles of operation of natural systems and to
predict their responses to change.
11Key Distinctions
- Ecology is a science
- Our focus in this course
- Environmentalism is a cause
- With our without scientific backing
- Conservation Biology is the integration of these
two - Using science to support a political cause
12Factors Influencing Organism Distribution and
Abundance
- Abiotic
- Climate
- Topography
- Latitude
- Altitude
- Biotic
- Intra-specific Interactions
- Inter-specific Interactions
13Individuals, populations, communities and
ecosystems
- 4 identifiable subdivisions of scale
- Individuals response to their environment
- Populations determinants of abundance
populations fluctuate - Communities mixture of populations of different
species found within a defined area - Ecosystems a system formed by the interaction of
a community of organisms with their environment
14Proximate Fields
- Trends down pyramid
- Increase in geographic scale
- From single species to multiple species
- Increasing number of ecological factors that may
be influential - Decreasing certainty in results
Population
Community
Ecosystem
15Fields of ecology
- Behavioural ecology patterns in behaviour
- Physiological ecology consequences of
physiology on function and behaviour - Evolutionary ecology ecology is only
understandable in light of evolution - Population ecology understanding complexity
requires models - Community ecology interactions between species
- Molecular ecology molecular biology recently
being used to address ecological problems
16What do ecologists investigate?
- 1. Response of individuals to their environment
- 2. Response of populations of a single species to
the environment (e.g. abundance and fluctuations) - 3. Composition and structure of communities (e.g.
populations occurring within defined area) - 4. Processes occurring within ecosystems
(community and abiotic components of environment)
171. Response of individuals to their environment
adaptation
- Adaptation any heritable trait (behavioural,
morphological, physical) possessed by an organism
which aids survival or reproduction in a
particular environment. - E.g. Peppered moth (Biston betularia) has
genetically based colour differences. - Temperate nocturnal species rests on tree
trunks during day (avian predators pluck from
resting place) - Lichens cover many tree trunks but these dies out
during industrial revolution trunks became
blackened by soot - Genetic darkening of species in response to
pollutants industrial melanism
18Melanic (dark coloured) individuals became
favoured in polluted areas where lichens are
absent and tree trunks are darkened by
soot. Pale individuals dominated but died out
during industrial revolution. They have now
returned. Camouflaged from avian predators
against lichen-covered trees.
19Adaptation to the environment 2
- Fitness ability of individual to produce viable
offspring and contribute to future generations. - Higher fitness may be due to possession of genes
which give advantage - E.g. Insecticide resistance Austrailian sheep
blowfly (Lucilia cuprina) resistant to
organophosphate insecticide malathion by the gene
Rmal. - Those flies homozygous for this gene can
tolerate a high level of malathion. Those flies
not possessing this gene will not survive.
20Adaptation to the environment 3
- Genotype genetic composition of an individual
- Phenotype is the individual organism a product
of the interaction between its genotype and its
environment. - Ability of phenotype to vary due to environmental
influences on its genotype is known as phenotypic
plasticity (e.g. suntan in humans)
21Adaptation to the environment 4
- Natural selection (survival of the fittest)
the inds. in a spp. which have the highest
fitness will contribute disproportionately to
subsequent generation - E.g. The fly (Drosophilia melanogaster) often
found in association with wine production where
they are exposed to unusually high levels of
ethanol. - Such populations have an elevated ethanol detox
ability as natural selection has led to
possession of higher levels of alcohol
dehydrogenase (ADH) enzyme.
22Significance of ecology human concerns about
the environment
- 1960's radicalism concerns about a
deteriorating environment along with publication
of two influential books brought the science of
ecology into the popular culture - Rachael Carson - Silent Spring general public
made aware of dangers of pollution/environmental
degrad. She envisioned a "silent spring" - song
birds might eventually become extinct due to use
of pesticides (American Bald Eagle nearly
extinct pesticide DDT) - 2. Paul Ehrlich - "Population Bomb" said much
the same as Essay on the Principle of Population
written by Malthus 200 hundred years earlier.
Both argued the earth could support only so many
people and population growth should be slowed.
Ehrlich founded the organization Zero Population
Growth, which recently changed its name to
Population Connection.
23Ecology and the environmental movement
- 70s anxiety about environment deepened
- BUT also changed in emphasis
- More attention on energy demands rather than pop.
Growth like 60s - Quality of env. Related to quality of life
24Summary
- Ecology is the study of the interactions between
organisms and their environment - Factors influencing organism distrib. abun.
biotic abiotic - Hierarchy Inds., pops. comms., ecosystems
- Fields of ecology
- Adaptation to environment heritable traits,
fitness, genotypes, phenotypes, natural selection - Significance of ecology human concerns about
environment
25Biodiversity
BS 111 Ecology Biodiversity
26Learning objectives
- define biodiversity
- identify the parts of the scientific name of an
organism and write a scientific name in the
correct form - describe the extent of biodiversity as evidenced
by the number of species in the major groups - name the eight kingdoms, identify reasons why the
number of kingdoms has been increased from two to
eight and describe some of the reasons for
thinking there could be more than eight - explain some of the methods used to estimate
species richness
27What is Biodiversity?
- Richness diversity of life number of species
on earth???? - Dependant for goods and services (e.g. food,
water) ecosystem services - Economy/lifestyles Fish stocks, timber, new food
sources, new medicines, - Moral/ethical/philosophical
- Aesthetic/spiritual/cultural
28BD scientific certainties uncertainties
- 2004 Sargasso Sea small sample of water found
148 new spp. Of bacteria (normally famous for
lack of diversity) - Modern scientific methods changing realising
how little we know - Diversity increases over time then some
catastrophe, asteroid or volcanic eruption-
reduces it for a while - Most famous last mass extinction????
29Why important???
- Natural env. Provides us with food, medicine,
fuel, clothes, timber, climate regulation, water
purification, soil regeneration, nutrient
cycling, crop pollination FREE!!! - Ecologists economists estimate monetary value
of natures service to society 33 trillion per yr
30Classification
- In biology, binomial nomenclature is the formal
system of naming species - each species name is in (modern scientific) Latin
and has 2 parts, sometimes called "Latin name"
species, although scientific name is preferred - species is the lowest rank in the system for
classifying organisms. The seven main ranks are,
from largest to smallest - Kingdom
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Genus
- Species
31European otter Lutra lutra
- Kingdom Animalia
- Phylum Chordata
- Class Mammalia
- Order Carnivora
- Family Mustelidae
- Subfamily Lutrinae
- Genus Lutra
- Species L. lutra
32Biological diversity The number, variety, and
genetic variation of different organisms found
within a specified geographic region.
- 1. Two Kingdoms Animalia, Plantae
- 2. 1969 Five kingdoms
- Kingdom Monera 10,000 species Unicellular and
colonial--including the true bacteria
(eubacteria) and cyanobacteria (blue-green
algae). -
- Eukaryotic Cells With Nuclei And Membrane-Bound
Organelles - Kingdom Protista 250,000 species Unicellular
protozoans and unicellular multicellular
(macroscopic) algae with 9 2 cilia and flagella
(called undulipodia). 3. - Kingdom Fungi 100,000 species Haploid and
dikaryotic (binucleate) cells, multicellular,
generally heterotrophic, without cilia and
eukaryotic (9 2) flagella (undulipodia). 4. - Kingdom Plantae 250,000 species Haplo-diploid
life cycles, mostly autotrophic, retaining embryo
within female sex organ on parent plant. - Kingdom Animalia 1,000,000 species
Multicellular animals, without cell walls and
without photosynthetic pigments, forming diploid
blastula - Generally, animals then divided into Phyla and
plants into divisions.
33- Presently 8 kingdoms or more????
- Monera split into
- Eubacteria (a large group of bacteria having
rigid cell walls motile types have flagellaÂ
true bacteria) - Archaebacteria (considered to be an ancient form
of life that evolved separately from the bacteria
and blue-green algae and sometimes classified as
a kingdom). - Protista spilt into
- Archaezoa  (proposed for 3 phyla Archaemoebae,
Metamonada, Microsporidia, which differ from all
other eukaryotes in lacking mitochondria,
peroxosomes, Golgi dictyosomes and cisternae, and
probably also in having 70S rather than 80S
ribosomes). - Protozoa (diverse group of eukaryotes primarily
unicellular existing singly or aggregating into
colonies usually non-photosynthetic) - Chromista a further kingdom was proposed at the
same time for the photosynthetic, but chlorophyll
c unlike plants do not store energy as starch ,
e.g. diatoms phylum remains controversial.
34- What is a species?
- There are several competing theories, or "species
concepts" - morphological species concept largely outdated
but still widely used species are the smallest
groups that are consistently and persistently
distinct, and distinguishable by ordinary means.
Or "a species is a community, or a number of
related communities, whose distinctive
morphological characters are, in the opinion of a
competent systematist, sufficiently definite to
entitle it, or them, to a specific name" - biological species concept "a species is a group
of interbreeding natural populations that is
reproductively isolated from other such groups". - phylogenetic species concept "is the smallest
diagnosable cluster of individual organism that
is, the cluster of organisms are identifiably
distinct from other clusters within which there
is a parental pattern of ancestry and descent".
35Species richness
- Species richness number of species in a
community - Community an association of interacting species
inhabiting some defined area - Species diversity number of species (richness)
and their relative abundance (evenness)
36Estimating the number of species in communities
Both forests 5 tree species equal species
richness BUT community b more diverse than
community a because its species evenness is
higher Community b each species 20
pop. Community a 84 belong to one
species Walking through forest impression of
higher species diversity in community b despite
levels of species richness in the 2 forests
37How many species?
- This is one of the most fundamental questions an
ecologist can ask about a community. - However, determining this not always easy.
- Requires carefully designed, standardized
sampling program.
38Sampling effort
- Number of species recorded in a sample of a
community increases with higher sampling effort. - Species richness curve
- Indicator taxa to reduce sampling effort
required to estimate species richness
examples???? - Standardized sampling necessary to provide a
valid sampling basis for comparing species
richness across communities - Collect same number of samples from each
community (or, for observational studies, spend
the same amount of time observing) - Use the same sampling methods in each study area
(e.g. sampling devices used, way devices
employed, time when sampling done, number of
habitats sampled)
39Summary
- Classification/nomenclature
- What is biodiversity?
- How many kingdoms how many species????
- What is a species???
- How do we count them???
- How do we sample them?