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Communities in Motion

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Title: Communities in Motion


1
Communities in Motion
  • A biological community is an assemblage of
    populations of various species living close
    enough for potential interaction
  • For example, the carrier crab carries a sea
    urchin on its back for protection against
    predators

2
Community interactions are classified by whether
they help, harm, or have no effect on the
species involved
  • Ecologists call relationships between species in
    a community interspecific interactions
  • Examples are competition, predation, herbivory,
    symbiosis (parasitism, mutualism, and
    commensalism)
  • Interspecific interactions can affect the
    survival and reproduction of each species, and
    the effects can be summarized as positive (),
    negative (), or no effect (0)

3
Competition
  • Interspecific competition (/ interaction)
    occurs when species compete for a resource in
    short supply

Competitive Exclusion
  • Strong competition can lead to competitive
    exclusion, local elimination of a competing
    species
  • The competitive exclusion principle states that
    two species competing for the same limiting
    resources cannot coexist in the same place

4
Ecological Niches and Natural Selection
  • Ecological niche ? can also be thought of as an
    organisms ecological role (its use of biotic
    and abiotic factors)
  • Ecologically similar species can coexist in a
    community if there are one or more significant
    differences in their niches however, TWO SPECIES
    CANNOT OCCUPY THE EXACT SAME NICHE! (One will be
    excluded through competition.)
  • Resource partitioning of a niche enables similar
    species to coexist in a community

5
Figure 54.2
A. distichus perches on fence posts and
other sunny surfaces.
A. insolitus usually perches on shady branches.
A. ricordii
A. insolitus
A. aliniger
A. christophei
A. distichus
A. cybotes
A. etheridgei
6
Predation
  • Predation (/ interaction) refers to interaction
    where one species, the predator, kills and eats
    the other, the prey
  • Some feeding adaptations of predators are claws,
    teeth, fangs, stingers, and poison
  • Prey display various defensive adaptations
  • include hiding, fleeing, forming herds or
    schools, self-defense, and alarm calls

7
  • Animals also have morphological and physiological
    defense adaptations
  • Cryptic coloration, or camouflage, makes prey
    difficult to spot
  • Animals with effective chemical defense often
    exhibit bright warning coloration, called
    aposematic coloration
  • Predators are particularly cautious in dealing
    with prey that display such coloration

http//www.youtube.com/watch?vPmDTtkZlMwM
8
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9
  • In some cases, a prey species may gain
    significant protection by mimicking the
    appearance of another species
  • In Batesian mimicry, a palatable or harmless
    species mimics an unpalatable or harmful model
  • In Müllerian mimicry, two or more unpalatable
    species resemble each other

10
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11
Symbiosis
  • Symbiosis is a relationship where two or more
    species live in direct and intimate contact with
    one another

- Parasitism
  • In parasitism (/ interaction), one organism,
    the parasite, derives nourishment from another
    organism, its host, which is harmed in the
    process
  • Parasites that live within the body of their host
    are called endoparasites (worms), or on the
    external surface of a host are ectoparasites
    (ticks)

12
Mutualism
  • Mutualistic symbiosis, or mutualism (/
    interaction), is an interspecific interaction
    that benefits both species
  • A mutualism can be
  • Obligate, where one species cannot survive
    without the other
  • Facultative, where both species can survive alone

13
Figure 54.7
(a) Acacia tree and ants (genus Pseudomyrmex)
(b) Area cleared by ants at the base of an acacia
tree
14
Commensalism
  • In commensalism (/0 interaction), one species
    benefits and the other is neither harmed nor
    helped
  • Commensal interactions are hard to document in
    nature because any close association likely
    affects both species

15
Physical laws govern energy flow and chemical
cycling in ecosystems
  • An ecosystem consists of all the organisms living
    in a community, as well as the abiotic factors
    with which they interact
  • Regardless of an ecosystems size, its dynamics
    involve two main processes energy flow and
    chemical cycling
  • Remember Energy flows through an ecosystemwhile
    matter is recycled!

16
  • Trophic structure is the feeding relationships
    between organisms in a community

Trophic level refers to where a species falls in
the food chain
  • Energy and nutrients pass from primary producers
    (autotrophs) to primary consumers (herbivores) to
    secondary consumers (carnivores) to tertiary
    consumers (carnivores that feed on other
    carnivores)

Food chains link trophic levels from producers to
top carnivores
17
Energy, Mass, and Trophic Levels
Every food web must contain a PRIMARY PRODUCER!
It is responsible for making all of the organic
materials that will be passed along the food
chain. Primary producers capture all the
ENERGY the ecosystem will have!
  • Heterotrophs depend on the biosynthetic output of
    other organisms

Primary production is the amount of light energy
converted to chemical energy by autotrophs during
a given time period ? The extent of
photosynthetic production sets the spending limit
for an ecosystems energy budget
18
Figure 55.4
Sun
Key
Chemical cycling Energy flow
Heat
Primary producers
Primaryconsumers
Detritus
Microorganismsand otherdetritivores
Secondary andtertiary consumers
19
  • Tropical rain forests, estuaries, and coral reefs
    are among the most productive ecosystems per unit
    area
  • Marine ecosystems are relatively unproductive per
    unit area, but contribute much to global net
    primary production because of their volume

20
Energy transfer between trophic levels is
typically only 10 efficient
  • The other 90
  • gets used by the organism for cellular process
    growth
  • some is lost as heat
  • some eliminated as waste

21
  • In a biomass pyramid, each tier represents the
    dry weight of all organisms in one trophic level
  • Most biomass pyramids show a sharp decrease at
    successively higher trophic levels

22
Trophic Efficiency and Ecological Pyramids
  • Trophic efficiency is the percentage of
    production transferred from one trophic level to
    the next
  • It is usually about 10, (with a range of 5 to
    20)
  • Approximately 0.1 of chemical energy fixed by
    photosynthesis reaches a tertiary consumer
  • Food chains rarely go beyond quaternary
    consumers because there simply isnt enough
    energy left to sustain that level of consumer.

23
Food Webs
  • A food web is a branching food chain with complex
    trophic interactions
  • Species may play a role at more than one trophic
    level

24
Be able to identify the primary producers,
primary consumers (herbivores), etc
How would a decomposer fit into a food web?
25
  • Detritivores, or decomposers, are consumers that
    derive their energy from detritus, nonliving
    organic matter
  • Prokaryotes and fungi are important detritivores
  • Decomposition connects all trophic levels

26
Species with a Large Impact
  • Certain species have a very large impact on
    community structure
  • Such species are highly abundant (Dominant
    species) or play a pivotal role in community
    dynamics (Keystone species)

27
Dominant Species
  • Dominant species are those that are most abundant
    or have the highest biomass
  • Dominant species exert powerful control over the
    occurrence and distribution of other species
  • For example, sugar maples have a major impact on
    shading and soil nutrient availability in eastern
    North America this affects the distribution of
    other plant species

28
Keystone Species
  • Keystone species exert strong control on a
    community by their ecological roles, or niches
  • In contrast to dominant species, they are not
    necessarily abundant in a community
  • Keystone predators usually increase diversity in
    a community by holding down prey populations.

For example It could be a small predator that
keeps down a population of herbivores and
prevents them from wiping out a plant species.
They're effective especially when the other
animal has no other predators.
29
Figure 54.17
EXPERIMENT
RESULTS
20
With Pisaster (control)
15
Number of species present
10
Without Pisaster (experimental)
5
0
73
72
71
70
69
68
67
66
65
64
1963
Year
30
Ecological Succession
  • Ecological succession is the sequence of
    community and ecosystem changes after a
    disturbance
  • Primary succession occurs where no soil exists
    when succession begins. Retreating glaciers
    provide a valuable field-research opportunity for
    observing primary succession.
  • Secondary succession begins in an area where soil
    remains after a disturbance

Early arrival species may facilitate appearance
of later species by making the environment
favorable
31
The first stage of succession is called the
pioneer stage.
  • Succession is the result of changes induced by
    the vegetation itself
  • A CLIMAX COMMUNITY is a mature, stable community
    that is the final stage of ecological succession

32
Biological and geochemical processes cycle
nutrients and water in ecosystems
  • Life depends on recycling chemical elements
  • Nutrient circuits in ecosystems involve biotic
    and abiotic components and are often called
    biogeochemical cycles
  • A model of nutrient cycling includes main
    reservoirs of elements and processes that
    transfer elements between reservoirs
  • All elements cycle between organic and inorganic
    reservoirs

33
Biogeochemical Cycles
  • Gaseous carbon, oxygen, sulfur, and nitrogen
    occur in the atmosphere and cycle globally
  • Less mobile elements include phosphorus,
    potassium, and calcium

In terrestrial ecosystems, nitrogen is the most
common limiting nutrient.
34
  • Water is essential to all organisms
  • Liquid water is the primary physical phase in
    which water is used
  • The oceans contain 97 of the biospheres water
    2 is in glaciers and polar ice caps, and 1 is
    in lakes, rivers, and groundwater
  • Water moves by the processes of evaporation,
    transpiration, condensation, precipitation, and
    movement through surface and groundwater

35
Figure 55.14a
The Water Cycle
Movement overland by wind
Precipitationover land
Evaporationfrom ocean
Precipitationover ocean
Evapotranspira-tion from land
Percolationthroughsoil
Runoff andgroundwater
36
  • The Carbon Cycle
  • Carbon-based organic molecules are essential to
    all organisms
  • Photosynthetic organisms convert CO2 to organic
    molecules that are used by heterotrophs
  • Carbon reservoirs include fossil fuels, soils and
    sediments, plant and animal biomass, the
    atmosphere, and sedimentary rocks
  • CO2 is taken up and released through
    photosynthesis and respiration additionally,
    volcanoes and the burning of fossil fuels
    contribute CO2 to the atmosphere

37
CO2 inatmosphere
Photosynthesis
Photo-synthesis
Cellularrespiration
Burningof fossilfuels andwood
Phyto-plankton
Consumers
Consumers
Decomposition
38
  • The Nitrogen Cycle
  • Nitrogen is a component of amino acids, proteins,
    and nucleic acids
  • The main reservoir of nitrogen is the atmosphere
    (N2), though this nitrogen must be converted to
    other usable forms for the plant ? this is done
    through nitrogen fixation by bacteria

39
Terrestrialcycling
N2
Denitri-fication
Assimilation
Decom-position
NO3
Uptakeof aminoacids
Fixationin root nodules
Ammonification
Nitrification
NH3
NO2
NH4
40
Decomposition and Nutrient Cycling Rates
  • Decomposers (detritivores) play a key role in the
    general pattern of chemical cycling
  • Rates at which nutrients cycle in different
    ecosystems vary greatly, mostly as a result of
    differing rates of decomposition
  • The rate of decomposition is controlled by
    temperature, moisture, and nutrient availability
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