Title: Interspecific Competition
1Interspecific Competition
2Interspecific Competition
- between ? 2 species
- within same guild/trophic level
- same resources/set of resources
- mutually negative interaction (-/-)
- decrease in fitness (e.g., fecundity) presumed to
cause reduced abundance - does not involve predation
3Types of Competition Studies
- Observational
- negative correlations between species
- attributed to present competition or past
(ghost of competition past) - cant determine cause and effect
- other factors may be involved
4Types of Competition Studies
- Observational Comparison to null model
- compare observed patterns to those generated by
chance alone - statistical comparison
- challenge is to formulate the appropriate null
model
5Types of Competition Studies
- Experimental
- addition/removal studies
- manipulate presence and/or density of would-be
competitors - must account for density effects
- provides strong inference (strong evidence for
or against) - cannot be done with many species
66 Mechanisms of Competition(after Schoener 1983)
- 1) Consumptive one species competes with
another by consuming a shared resource
Brown and Davidson 1977
76 Mechanisms of Competition
- 2) Preemptive occupation of physical habitat by
one species, thereby excluding another
8invasive Salvinia
Swamp Forest Understory
96 Mechanisms of Competition
- 3) Overgrowth one species grows over another
106 Mechanisms of Competition
- 4) Chemical chemical warfare
- allelopathy in plants has not been convincingly
demonstrated - growth inhibitors in animals
Bare zones in California chaparral
Allelopathy among shrubs (Muller 1969)
116 Mechanisms of Competition
- 5) Territorial aggressive behavioral exclusion
Gray reef shark
126 Mechanisms of Competition
- 6) Encounter nonterritorial encounters between
foraging species - wasted time/energy that couldve been devoted to
reproductive output
Example parasitoid wasp species
13Models of Competition
14Exponential Growth
- J curve
- dN/dt rN
- r intrinsic rate of increase
15Logistic Growth Model
- S curve
- dN/dt rN(1-N/K)
- dN/dt - population growth rate
- r - per capita rate of increase
- K - carrying capacity
- growth rate decreases as approaches K
- max. population size occurs when dN/dt 0
Resistance
16Models of Competition
- Lotka (1925) Volterra (1926)
- descriptive model
- developed with mobile animals in mind
- extended logistic model to include two-species
competition
17Lotka-Volterra Model
- dN1/dt r1N1(K1-N1-?12N2)/K1
- dN2/dt r2N2(K2-N2-?21N2)/K2
- main difference is a competition coefficient ?ij
effect of species j on species i - How much does species j utilize the carrying
capacity of species i?
18Lotka-Volterra cont
- if species I and J are equivalent competitors,
?ij ?ji 1 rarely happens - if ?ij lt 1 means effect of species j is less than
effect of species i on its own members - if ?ji lt 1 means effect of species i is less than
effect of species j on its own members
19Zero Isoclines and State-space Graphs
- dN/dt or growth rate of selected species is set
to 0 and you solve for N - give values of N1 and N2 that yield zero
population growth for each species - the x axis represents abundance of species 1, and
the y axis represents the abundance of species 2 - points represent a combination of abundances of
species 1 and 2
20Zero Isoclines
- population is increasing left of isocline (below
K) and decreasing right of isocline (above K) - isocline for species 1 represents a combination
of abundances of the two species where species 1
population does not increase or decrease
equivalent of sp 2, no sp 1
all sp 2, no sp 1
equivalent of sp 1, no sp 2
all sp 1, no sp 2
21Different Outcomes
22Arrangements of 2 Isoclines (1)
- competitive exclusion of species 2 by species 1
- population of species 2 goes from 0 to negative
under conditions in which species 1 can increase
stable equilibrium
23Arrangements of 2 Isoclines (2)
- competitive exclusion of species 1 by species 2
- population of species 1 goes from 0 to negative
under conditions in which species 2 can increase
stable equilibrium
24Arrangement of 2 Isoclines (3)
- both species have achieved zero growth (isoclines
cross) and stable coexistence (initial abundances
do not matter)
stable equilibrium
25Arrangement of 2 Isoclines (4)
- isoclines cross, but whether species coexist
depends on initial abundances of the species
unstable equilibrium
stable equilibrium
unstable equilibrium
stable equilibrium
26Lotka-Volterra Summary
- assumptions
- no migration
- K and ?ij are constants
- stable coexistence is possible only when
intraspecific competition is greater than
interspecific competition
27Mechanistic Models of Competition
- incorporate resources
- express competition coefficients carrying
capacities as rates of utilization resource
renewal - Under what conditions do we find coexistence of
species?
28The R Rule
- R - concentration of a resource when a
population of a single species grown alone
reaches its equilibrium density - winner of competition is determined by which
consumer species produces the lower value of R
in the absence of the other - Essentially, who can maintain population at the
lowest level of the limiting resource(s)?
29Tilmans Models of Competition
- multi-consumer, multi-resource models
- average mortality rate of each species
- assumed to be independent of density resources
- supply rates of limiting nutrients
- population growth rates as a function of nutrient
supply rates - assumed to level off at high rates due to
saturation - competition occurs through the effect of each
species on the consumed resources (consumptive)
30Zero-growth IsoclinesCompetitive Exclusion
- region 1
- below minimum concentration needed to balance
growth mortality - both go extinct
- regions 2 3
- species A wins (lowest R)
31Zero-growth IsoclinesCompetitive Exclusion
A
B
- region 1
- below minimum concentration needed to balance
growth mortality - both go extinct
- regions 5 6
- species B wins (lowest R)
1
6
5
Supply Rate Resource Y
Supply Rate Resource X
32Reading Assignment
- Tilman, D. 1985. The resource ratio hypothesis
of plant succession. American Naturalist 125
827-852. - Well discuss this paper next Monday, February 18.
33Crossing of Zero-growth IsoclinesStable
Coexistence
- region 1 both go extinct
- species A resource Y limits it most
- species B resource X limits it most
A
B
CA
1
2
3
4
CB
Supply Rate Resource Y
5
6
Supply Rate Resource X
34Crossing of Zero-growth IsoclinesStable
Coexistence
- CA and CB consumption vectors or ratio in which
the 2 resources consumed by each consumer - species A B consume resource that limits it the
most at a greater rate than it consumes the
non-limiting resource - region 4 stable coexistence
A
B
CA
1
2
3
4
CB
Supply Rate Resource Y
5
6
Supply Rate Resource X
35Crossing of Zero-growth IsoclinesUnstable
Coexistence
- region 1 both go extinct
- each species consumes resource that limits the
other species the most at a greater rate than it
consumes the resource most limiting to it - region 4 unstable coexistence
A
B
CB
1
2
3
4
CA
Supply Rate Resource Y
5
6
Supply Rate Resource X
36Competition between Algal Species
Cyclotella
- two diatom species
- two resources phosphate and silica
- R is lower for silica than phosphate in
Cyclotella - phosphate limits Cyclotella the most
R 0.6
PO4 (?M)
R 0.2
SiO2 (?M)
37Competition between Algal Species
Asterionella
- two diatom species
- two resources phosphate and silica
- R is lower for phosphate than silica in
Asterionella - silica limits Asterionella the most
R 1.9
PO4 (?M)
R 0.01
SiO2 (?M)
38Outcome of Competition
CCyclotella
- 1 - both go extinct
- 23 - Cyclotella wins
- 4 - stable coexistence
- 56 Asterionella wins
CAsterionella
39Neighborhood Models of Competition
- Tilmans models worked for phytoplankton
- resources more homogeneous
- dont work well for terrestrial plant species
- spatial relationships are important to
competitive outcome in plants - 2 main types of models
- simulations that keep track spatially of plants
- analytical models that capture essence of
spatially constrained competition
40Neighborhood Models of Competition
- plants compete within neighborhoods
- focal plant responds to competitors within a
surrounding area
focal plant
1
1
3
2
2
1
1
2
3
3
1
41Neighborhood Model of Intraspecific Competition
within Arabidopsis thaliana
Number of Seeds/Plant
Number of Neighbors
- Pacala and Silander (1985)
- fecundity reduced with number of neighbors
42Two Species Neighborhood Model of Competition
- Pacala (1986) - 2 annual plant species without
seed dormancy - density of neighbors affects fecundity
- main point similar to Lotka- Volterra
coexistence where intraspecific competition gt
interspecific competition
43Coexistence of Species
- some species fail to coexist
- those that do coexist, have interspecific
differences in resource use - even ecologically similar species differ to some
degree
44Meanings of Niche (1)
- Grinnell (1914) coined the term
- no two species of birds or mammals will be found
to occupy precisely the same niche - Hardin (1960) competitive exclusion principle
- complete competitors (i.e., those that compete
for EXACTLY the same resources in the same way)
CANNOT coexist - thus, species that do coexist must differ in
resource utilization - niche or resource partitioning, species packing
45Meanings of Niche (2)
- Elton (1926)
- what place a species occupies in a community
- functional role of a species
- Hutchinson (1957)
- range of physical biological conditions
required by a species - n-dimensional hypervolume each axis corresponds
to an individual physical or biological variable
46Resource Partitioning
- species that coexist differ in some aspect of
their lifestyle (n-dimensional hypervolume) - MacArthur (1958)
- foraging differences of 5 warbler species in
New Hampshire - partitioning resources by specializing on
different structural strata in the forest
47Fundamental Realized Niches
- fundamental
- physiological response curve, pre-interactive
- range of conditions in which a species can occur
in the absence of competitors - absence of other species in general, including
facilitators - realized
- ecological response curve, post-interactive
- range of conditions over which a species occur in
the presence of competitors - range will be reduced because competitive
exclusion in areas of overlap with competing
species
48Fundamental Realized Niches
- after Mueller-Dombois and Ellenberg (1974)
- competitors constrain species Z to its ecological
response curve (realized niche)
Species Z
49Regeneration Niche
- Grubb (1977)
- one more way species can partition up the
physical and biological hypervolume - differences in phenology, timing of germination,
microsite specialization