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Community Ecology

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Chapter 53 Community Ecology Community Ecology A community is an assemblage of species (populations) living close enough together for potential interaction in a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Ecology


1
Community Ecology
Chapter 53
2
Community Ecology
  • A community is an assemblage of species
    (populations) living close enough together for
    potential interaction in a habitat

3
Community Ecology
  • The boundaries of a community can be set by the
    experimental question (the decomposers on a
    rotting log, the benthic community of Lake Erie,
    the trees and shrubs in Yellowstone National
    Park)
  • Communities vary in their species richness and
    relative abundance

4
Interspecific Interactions
  • Interspecific competition competition for
    resources between different species when
    resources are in short supply

5
Interspecific Competition
  • Competitive exclusion principle The concept
    that when populations of two similar species
    compete for the same limited resources, one
    population will use the resources more
    efficiently and have a reproductive advantage
    that will
    eventually lead
    to the

    elimination of
    the other
    population

6
The Ecological Niche
  • An organisms ecological niche is described as
    its place in an ecosystem its habitat and use
    of biotic and abiotic resources
  • The competitive exclusion principle holds that
    two
    species with
    identical
    niches cannot
    coexist in a
    community

7
Resource Partitioning
  • Resource partitioning slight variations in
    niche that allow ecologically similar species to
    coexist competition is a selection factor in
    evolution

8
Predation
  • Predation a predator eating prey
  • Includes herbivory and parasitism
  • Eating and being eaten are prerequisite to
    reproductive success
  • Adaptations to increase success in predation may
    include acute senses, speed and agility,
    camouflage coloration, and physical structure
    such as claws, fangs, teeth, and stingers

9
Predation
  • Plants may defend themselves with mechanical
    devices, such as thorns, or chemical compounds
  • Animals can defend against predation by hiding,
    fleeing, or defending
  • Cryptic coloration allows animals to blend in to
    their environment
  • Mechanical and chemical defenses discourage
    predation
  • Aposematic coloration warns predators not to eat
    animals with chemical defenses

10
Predation
11
Predation
  • Mimicry may be used by prey to exploit the
    warning coloration of other species
  • Batesian mimicry a palatable or harmless
    species mimics an unpalatable or harmful model
  • Müllerian mimicry two or more unpalatable
    species resemble each other

Cuckoo Bee
Yellow Jacket
12
Parasites
  • A parasite derives its nourishment from another
    organism, the host, which is harmed in the
    process
  • Parasites that live within the host are
    endoparasites those that feed on the surface of
    a host are ectoparasites
  • In parasitoidism, insects lay eggs
    on hosts, on which their larvae
    then feed.
  • Parasites do not usually cause
    lethal harm to the host on which
    they feed

13
Mutualism
  • In mutualism, interactions between species
    benefit both participants
  • Mutualistic interactions require the coevolution
    of adaptations in both species
  • Many cases of mutual
    symbiosis may have evolved
    when organisms became able
    to derive some benefits
    from their predator or
    parasite

Mutualism between acacia trees and ants
14
Commensalism
  • In commensalism, only one member appears to
    benefit from the interaction
  • Examples include hitchhiking species and
    species that feed on food incidentally exposed by
    another

The Patella gets it food from the plant, the
Euklonia, which is not harmed or damaged in the
process.
Example of Mutualism
15
Trophic Structure
  • The trophic structure
    of a community is its
    feeding relations
  • A food chain shows
    the transfer of food
    energy from one
    trophic level to the
    next

16
Food Webs
  • A food web
    diagrams the
    complex trophic
    relationships
    within a
    community

17
What Limits the Length of a Food Chain?
  • Within a food web, each food chain consists of
    only a few links (usually five or fewer)
  • Two hypotheses
  • Energetic hypothesis food chains are limited by
    inefficiency of energy transfer (only about 10)
    from one trophic level to the next
  • Dynamic stability hypothesis suggests that
    short food chains are more stable than long ones
    because an environmental disruption that reduces
    production at lower levels will be magnified at
    higher trophic levels as food supply is reduced
    all the way up the chain

18
Dominant Species
  • Species in a community that have the highest
    abundance or largest biomass are a major
    influence on the distribution and abundance of
    other species
  • A species may become a dominant species due to
    its competitive use of resources or success at
    avoiding predation
  • What happens if the dominant specie is removed
    from a habitat such as the American chestnut
    trees?

19
Keystone Species
  • A keystone species has a large impact on
    community structure as a result of its ecological
    role
  • Experiments with a predatory sea star (Pisaster)
    demonstrates the importance of keystone species

20
Sea Otters as Keystone Predators in the North
Pacific
21
Structures of Communities
  • The structure of a community may be controlled
    bottom-up by nutrients or top-down by predators
  • According to the bottom-up model of community
    organization, N ? V ? H ? P, an increase in
    nutrients yields an increase in biomass at each
    succeeding trophic level
  • The top-down model, N ? V ? H ? P, assumes that
    predation controls community organization also
    called the trophic cascade model

22
Disturbance and Community Structure
  • The nonequilibrium model emphasizes the
    nonstable, changing structure and composition of
    communities as a result of disturbances
  • Disturbances such as fire, drought, storms,
    overgrazing, or human activity change resource
    availability, reduce or eliminate some
    populations, and may create opportunities for new
    species
  • Small scale disturbances may enhance
    environmental patchiness and help maintain
    species diversity

23
Disturbance and Community Structure
24
Disturbance and Community Structure
25
Disturbance and Community Structure
26
Ecological Succession
  • Ecological succession is the transition in
    species composition in a community, usually
    following some disturbance
  • Primary succession occurs in areas previously
    devoid of life (new volcanic island or the
    moraine left by a retreating glacier)
  • Autotrophic bacteria ? lichens ? mosses ? grasses
    ? shrubs ? trees
  • Secondary succession occurs in existing
    communities that have been disturbed by fire,
    logging, or farming, but the soil remains intact
  • Herbaceous species ? woody shrubs ? trees

27
Biodiversity
  • A communities biodiversity correlates with its
    size and geographic location
  • Biodiversity is greatest in the tropics and on
    large versus smaller islands
  • Biodiversity is measured by both species richness
    and relative abundance
  • Ecologists measure biodiversity as heterogeneity,
    which considers both diversity factors richness
    and relative abundance

28
Which Forest is More Diverse?
29
Biodiversity
  • Tropical habitats
    support much larger
    numbers of species
    of plants, animals,
    and other organisms
    than do temperate
    and polar regions

30
Biodiversity
  • A speciesarea curve illustrates the correlation
    between the size of a community and the number of
    species found there

31
Biodiversity
  • Island biogeography states that the size of the
    island and its closeness to the mainland (or
    source of dispersing species) are important
    variables directly correlated with species
    diversity
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