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Title: by Tracy Reynolds


1
Chapter 5
  • by Tracy Reynolds
  • Rose, period 7

2
How do species interact?
  • 5 Major interactions
  • Interspecific competition- occurs when members of
    two or more species interact to gain access to
    the same limits resources such as food, light, or
    space.
  • Predation- occurs when a member of one species
    feeds directly on all or part of a member of
    another species.
  • Parasitism- occurs when one organisim feeds on
    the body of, or the energy used by, another
    organism, usually by living on or in the host.
  • Mutualism- an interaction that benefits both
    speciesby providing each other with food,
    shelter, or some other resource.
  • Commensalism- interaction the benefits one
    species but has little, if any, effect on the
    other

3
Competition for Resources
  • The most common intereaction between species is
    competition. Each species has its oen ecoligical
    niche. Some have broad nices, and some have
    narrow ones. When two species compete for the
    same reasouces such as food, the niches overlap.
    When overlapping, the competetion gets more
    intense. Its very un common to find two spices
    sharing the same exact niche, and if the do, one
    species is always more dominant. Wich forces the
    other species to go extinct, change eating
    habits, or migrate to a new area.

4
Most Consumer Species feed on live organisms of
other species
  • In predication, a member of one species (the
    predator) feeds directly on all or part of the
    living organism of another plact or animal
    species (the prey) as a part or a food web.
    Together, the two different species, such as
    lions and zebras, form a predator-prey
    relationship.

5
Most Consumer Species feed on live organisms of
other species
  • Things such as herbivores, carnivores, and
    omnivores are predators, but technically not
    because they do not have to feed on live
    organisms. If you do prey on a live organisms,
    there are so many different ways the predators
    capture their prey. Things like camouflage,
    flying, speed (running), ambush, or even chemical
    warfare (venom).

6
Most Consumer Species feed on live organisms of
other species
  • Even though the predators have advantages, so do
    the prey. Things like protective shells, speed,
    flying, and chemical warfare. An example is like
    a skunk letting off its stench to scare away the
    predator.

7
Predator and Prey species can drive each other
evolution
  • When two different species interact for a long
    period of time, the gene pool can blend together
    and cause changes. Changes can help both sides
    become more competitive and reduce competition.
    They call this process, coevolution. Coevolution
    is like an arms race between interacting
    populations of different species. Sometimes
    predators, get the upper hand, then sometimes the
    prey does. Its one of natures way of maintaining
    long-term sustainability through population
    control, and it can promote biodiversity by
    increasing species diversity.

8
Some Species feed off other species by living on
or in them
  • This is parasitism, the parasite is usually
    smaller than the host. They gradually over time,
    draw nourishment for them from the host to
    gradually weaken them. Some also live inside the
    host, such as tape worms, or move move arond,
    like ticks.

9
Both species benefit
  • Mutualism, Both species provide each other with
    things like food and shelter. An example is the
    birds that ride on the back of large animals like
    buffalo and elephants, they eat the parasites and
    and pests off of them. They also make noise
    warning the larger animals when predators
    approach.

10
One species benefits, and other unharmed
  • Commensalism, an interaction that benefits but
    has has little or no effect on the other. An
    example, certain kinds of silver fish incests
    move alone with army ants to share the food, and
    the arms ants are unharmed, but have no benefit
    from it.

11
some species evolve to share resources
  • Some populations compete for the same resources
    and have to develop adaptation through natural
    selection. They do this to reduce competition, or
    you could say reducing niche overlapping. This
    happens through resource partitioning.

12
population dynamics
  • Populations differ in factors such as
    distribution, numbers, age structure and density.
    Population dynamics is specifically the study of
    how characteristics of populations change in
    response of change in the environment.

13
clumping
  • Animals live in clumps for
  • protection
  • better resources
  • hunting in packs
  • mating

14
population growth, or shrinkage, or stability
  • Can change due to, births, deaths, immigration or
    emigration.
  • Emigration departure of individuals from the
    population.
  • Immigration arrival of individuals from outside
    population

15
population growth, or shrinkage, or stability
  • Population increase can cepende on the age
    structure, with is the amount you have of each
    age group. To young to reproduce, the once that
    can reproduce, and the ones to old to reproduce.
    Generally most population should have most of the
    age of the ones that can reproduce.

16
J-curve and s-curve
  • Species vary in biotic potential, or capacity for
    population growth under ideal conditions.
    populations with larger spices like elephants,
    have low biotic potential. The smaller species
    have high biotic potential.

17
J-curve and s-curve
  • instinct rate of increase is the rate at which
    the population of a species would grow if it had
    unlimited resources.
  • environmental resistance combination of all
    factors that act to limit the growth of all
    population.
  • carrying capacity maximum population of a given
    species that a particular habitat can sustain
    indefinitely without being degraded.

18
J-curve and s-curve
  • A population with few, if any limitations in its
    resources can grow exponentially at a fixed rate
    such as 1 or 2 per year. Exponential or
    geometric growth starts slowly but then
    accelerates as the population increases, because
    the base size of the population is increasing.
    Plotting the number of individuals against time
    yields a J-shaped growth curve.

19
J-curve and s-curve
  • Logistic growth- involves rapid exponential
    population growth followed by a steady decrease
    in population growth until the population size
    levels off.
  • A plot of the number of individuals against time
    yields a sigmoid, or a S-shaped, logistic growth
    curve.

20
exceeding habitats carrying capacity can cause
its population to crash
  • Some populations can over use all their resources
    and temporarily over-shoot. This occurs because
    of a reproductive time lag, period needed for the
    birth rate to fall and death rate to rise in
    response to resource overconsumption.

21
Different reproductive patters
  • Species capable for a high rate population
    increase are called r-selected species. Usually
    have many small offspring, and dont show much
    parental activity. A lot of them die, so they can
    start the reproductive pattern again.
  • They can also be called opportunists, the
    reproduce repidly when conditions are favorable.

22
Different reproductive patters
  • Another one is called competitor or K-selected
    species. Reproduce later in life, very few off
    spring, and have lomg-term lives. They develop
    inside their mothers, come out fairly large,
    mature slow and are cared for by their parents.

23
Human population control

  • Things like bubonic plague, killed at least 25
    millon people.
  • AIDS has also killed atleast 25 million people.

24
Ecological Succession
  • The gradual change in species composition in a
    given area.

25
Ecological Succession
  • Primary Succession gradual establishment of
    biotic communities lifeless areas.
  • Secondary Succession a series of communities
    with different species develop in places
    containing soil or sediment.

26
primary succession
  • Begins in a very lifeless area, or bottom
    sediment in aquatic system.
  • Usually takes awhile to start, but rock
    eventually starts to weather relasing nutrients.

27
Secondary Succession
  • Begins where an ecosystem has been disturbed,
    removed, or destroyed but some soil and bottom
    sediment remains. Things like cut down forest, or
    abandoned farmland.

28
succession has no specific path
  • According to traditional view, succession
    proceeds in an orderly sequence along an
    unexpected path until a certain stable type of
    climax community occupies an area.
  • Over the lasy several decades ecologist have
    changes their views about balance and equilibrium
    nature. The current view is that we cannot
    predict the course of a given succession or view
    it as preordained progress toward an ideally
    adapted climax plant community or ecosystem.

29
Living systems are sustained through constant
change
  • It is useful to distinguish among two aspects of
    satiability in living systems. One is inertia, or
    persistence the ability of a living system, such
    as grass land or forest, to survive moderate
    disturbances. A second factor is resilience the
    ability of a living system be restored through
    secondary succession after a moderate
    disturbance.
  • However, there are limits to the stressed that
    ecosystems and global systems such as climate can
    take. As a result, such systems can reach a
    tipping pint, where any additional stress can
    cause the system to change in an abrupt and
    usually irreversible way that ofteninvolves
    collapse.

30
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