Title: Species Diversity and Community Stability
1Species Diversity and Community Stability
2Some initial observations
- When we sample species in a community, we usually
find a few species that are very common, while
many species are rare. - In our trapping efforts this semester in Ecology
and Mammalogy, we have trapped primarily B.
carolinensis, followed by P. leucopus, M.
pinetorum, and O. nuttalli.
3Initial observations.
- In fact, we usually find the data follow a
logarithmic series
4Initial observation.
- Here, ax number of species in the total catch
represented by one individual, ax2 number of
species in the total catch represented by two
individuals, and so on. Then, the number of
species in a sample is S
5Relative abundance of butterflies in Rothamsted,
England, in 1935.
6Initial observations
- What does this tell us about the structure of
communities?
7Diversity Indices
- We need some index to evaluate the diversity of
species in a community. - A common, and reasonable index is the
Shannon-Wiener Diversity Index.
8Diversity Indices
- Here, pi proportion of the ith species in the
total sample of S species. - This index has the pleasing property, that
communities with uneven abundances of species
have lower diversity.
9Diversity Indices
- Compute H for each of the following
- Community 1 with 90 individuals of species A and
10 individuals of species B. - Community 2 with 50 of species A and 50 of
species B. - Community 3 with 80 of species A, 10 of species
B, and 10 of species C. - Community 4 with 33.3 of species A, 33.3 of
species B, and 33.3 of species C.
10What do you get?
- Community 1) H 0.33
- Community 2) H 0.69
- Community 3) H 0.70
- Community 4) H 1.10
- These results are exactly what we would expect
intuitively.
11Evenness
- We can estimate the evenness of the community by
using J, where
12Evenness
- Here, Hmax is the maximum possible diversity,
assuming all species in the community have equal
representation. - Of course, these estimates are valid only within
the context of any given study, and are difficult
to compare across studies. Do you know why?
13What if you need to compare indices across
studies?
- The best bet is to rely on Species Richness.
This is simply the number of species observed.
14Gradients of Species Diversity
- In a very general way, we know that the tropics
contain more species than the temperate zones.
For example, - there are more than 1000 species of fish in the
Amazon, 456 in Central America, and only 172 in
the Great Lakes. - There are 7 ant species in Alaska, 73 in Iowa,
101 in Cuba, 134 in Trinidad, and 222 in Brazil.
15Gradients of Species Diversity
- There are examples where the pattern is opposite
of what we expect - Sandpipers
- Aphids
- Overall however, the patterns appear to be clear.
16Diversity of mammals
17Isoclines of mammal diversity in North America
18Isoclines of avian diversity in North America
19How do we explain these patterns?
- Time Hypothesis
- Spatial Heterogeneity Hypothesis
- Competition Hypothesis
- Predation Hypothesis
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21How do we explain these patterns?
- Climatic Stability Hypothesis
- Productivity Hypothesis
- Area Hypothesis in larger areas, the chances of
isolation between populations increase, with
corresponding increases in the chances of
speciation.
22How do we explain these patterns?
- Animal Pollinators Hypothesis in the tropics and
other humid parts of the world, winds are less
frequent and of lower intensity than in temperate
regions. This effect is accentuated by dense
vegetation cover. Therefore, most plants are
pollinted by animals. - Can you think of others?
23Community Stability
- This is the ability of a community to resist
change following a disturbance (community
resistance), or - the ability of a community to return to its
original configuration after a perturbation(commu
nity resilience). - Here it is worthwhile thinking about equilibria
from the Lotka-Volterra analyses.
24Community Stability
- Deserts have high resistance.
- Estuaries have low resistance, but high
resilience. - Does diversity cause stability?
- Laboratory experiments by Gause confirmed the
difficulty of achieving numerical stability in
simple systems.
25Community Stability
- Small, faunistically simple islands are much more
vulnerable to invading species than are
continents. - Outbreaks of pests are often found on cultivated
land or land disturbed by Humans both of which
contain few species. - Tropical rain forests do not have insect
outbreaks like those common in temperate forests.
26Community Stability
- Pesticides have caused pest outbreaks by the
elimination of predators and parasites from the
insect community of crop plants. - In a review of 40 food webs, the complexity of
food webs in stable communities has been found to
be greater than the complexity of food webs in
fluctuating environments.
27Community Stability
- If diversity is equated with stability, then
stability
28Community Stability
- In a food web with 4 links (1 predator and 4
prey), each link caries 0.25 of the total energy
in the food web, and stability -(4 x 0.25 x
log(0.25)) 1.38. - Adding another predator that eats all the prey
doubles the number of links to 8, and stability
2.08.
29What are the stability implications of these webs?
30Community Stability
- We can also get a given stability by having a
large number of species, each with a restricted
diet (specialists), or a smaller number of
species each with a broader diet (generalists). - Maximum stability occurs when there are m species
and m trophic levels, with each trophic level
containing 1 species.
31Community Stability
- Does this make sense?
- Restricted diets lower stability in general, but
in practice specializations may be essential for
efficient exploitation of prey. - In arctic systems with few species, it is
difficult to have a specialized diet, and species
are generalists (greater stability), but there
are few species and thus populations fluctuate
considerably.
32Community Stability
- In the tropics, with many species, stability can
be achieved with restricted diets, and species
specialize, feeding on only 1 or 2 trophic levels.
33Is there convincing evidence that diverse
communities are more stable than simple ones?
- 1 fluctuations of microtine rodents are as great
in simple arctic communities as they are in
complex temperate communities. - 2 Some field data suggests tropic stability is a
myth (Robin Andrews).
34Is there convincing evidence that diverse
communities are more stable than simple ones?
- 3 Rain Forests seem particularly susceptible to
human perturbations. - 4 Agricultural systems may suffer from outbreaks
not because of their simplicity, but because
their components have no co-evolutionary history.
35Two alternative views
- Equilibrium Hypothesis
- Local population sizes fluctuate little from
equilibrium values, which are determined by
predation, competition, and parasitism.
Communities are stable and perturbations are
damped out.
36Two alternative views
- Non-equilibrium Hypothesis
- Species composition is constantly changing, and
never in balance. Stability is elusive, and
persistence and resilience are key measures of
community behavior. - Key mechanism for this hypothesis is the
intermediate disturbance hypothesis
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38Community Change
- Succession
- If we were to burn the I.R. Kelso sanctuary and
then leave it alone, we could predict fairly
accurately what would happen. - In the first few years it would be covered by
weeds and grasses. - Shrubs would be established.
- Maple seedlings and other pioneer species would
be establsihed. - Finally, after 30 or 40 years it would look like
a young Oak-Hickory forest.
39Community Change
- After 300 years, it would be a climax community
an old growth forest with little understory. - If we then burned it again, it would repeat the
sequence. However, once in the climax, it will
stay there unless perturbed.
40Community Change
- The same pattern can be seen in the coastal
habitats of California, the Mesas of New Mexico,
the rocky intertidal, or even hot-spring algal
communities in Yellowstone. - Why does this happen?
41Rate of ice recession in Glacier Bay, Alaska
42Community Change
- Glacier recession results in significant
disturbance, with the newly exposed habitats
undergoing successional change. - But, do the communities ever reach the climax
stage? There are many examples where
environmental perturbations are frequent and
prevent attainment of the climax condition.
43Community Change
- There are 3 models for succession
- Facilitation model
- Inhibition model
- Tolerance model
44Facilitation model each species makes the
environment more suitable for the next.
45Inhibition model Initial colonists tend to
prevent subsequent colonization by other species.
Succession depends on chance events (who invades
first). Succession proceeds as colonists die,
but it is not in an orderly or predictable
fashion
46Tolerance model Any species can start the
succession, but the eventual climax is reached in
a somewhat orderly fashion.
47Succession
- Succession can be modified by a number of
factors - Stochastic events
- Life history
- Facilitative events
- Competition
- Herbivory
48Influence of succession and environmental
severity on major successional processes that
determine change in species composition during
colonization (C), maturation (M), or senescence
(S).
49Succession
- What does all this mean?
- Succession is a complex process, influenced by
many factors.
50Percent vegetative cover vs. field age and
nitrogen conc. for a intruduced plants, b
non-prairie natives, c true prairie natives.
51Island Biogeography
- Studies of succession have benefited greatly from
studies of island recolonization Krakatau in
1883, Mt. St. Helens in 1980. - When we study how islands are recolonized, we
begin to understand a great deal.
52Island Biogeography
- Area Effects
- What is the likelihood that an area will be
colonized? It depends on distance from source
pool, but also on size of the target. - Also, a small habitat is unlikely to support as
many different types of colonists as a big area.
53Island Biogeography
- This can be expressed as the following, where S
number of species, c is a constant measuring
number of species per unit area, A area, and z
a constant measuring the slope of the line
relating S and A.
54Island Biogeography
- Remarkable, for a wide range of species and
island situations, z tends to be about 0.3
(amphibians and reptiles of the west Indies,
beetles in the West Indies, Ants in Melanesia,
Vertebrates in Lake Michigan, and plants on the
Galapagos.
55Amphibians and Reptiles of the Antilles.
56Flowering plants in England.
57Insects of British trees open dots are
introduced species.
58North American Birds
59Island Biogeography
- Actual parameter values depend on whether a true
island is being considered, size of the island
relative to number of possible colonists, and
colonizing ability of species. - The pattern also holds for non-traditional
islands like mountain-tops in the Great Basin.
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61Boreal birds and mammals in the Great Basin.
62Island Biogeography
- Can we use these ideas to build a model of island
diversity? - This work was done by MacArthur and Wilson back
in the 1970s, and constitutes some of the most
ground-breaking ecological work ever. Now of
course, it seems intuitively obvious. I wonder
why it was not obvious earlier?
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