Title: Ecosystem Stability and Species Equilibrium Models
1Ecosystem Stability and Species Equilibrium Models
2Ecosystem Stability
- Ecosystems are relatively stable over time
- a rain forest today will look similar to the rain
forest in its place a hundred years from now - Ecosystems have a stable number of species over
time, although species turnover will change the
specific species in an ecosystem over time
3Ecosystem Stability
- What are the three types of stability?
- Persistence ability of an ecosystem to resist
disturbance - Constancy ability of a population to maintain
adequate population size - Resilience ability of an ecosystem or population
to bounce back after a disturbance
4What are the characteristics of stable ecosystems?
- complex food webs
- generalist species
- high species diversity
- complex species interactions
- high primary productivity
- low to moderate climate variation
- However, no cut and dry rules (at times, simple
can be stable too
5What determines how many species will exist in an
area?
- Species Equilibrium Model
- or, the
- Theory of Island Biogeography
6The Theory of Island Biogeography
- The theory was originally established for
islands, but can be adapted to any habitat
island - The number of species on an island is determined
by the balance of extinction and immigration - After some time, the immigration rate and
extinction rate will be equal equilibriujm
number of species on island
7The Theory of Island Biogeography
- The theory was originally established for
islands, but can be adapted to any habitat
island - The theory looks at the question from a
historical perspective How did the island get
from no species to the stable number that it has
now?
8The Theory of Island Biogeography
- The number of species on an island is determined
by the balance of extinction and immigration
Immigration rates start out high, because each
species to hit the island is likely to be a new
species, and will successfully immigrate Over
time the number decreases because there are no
new species left to colonize, and immigration is
difficult
9The Theory of Island Biogeography
- The number of species on an island is determined
by the balance of extinction and immigration
Extinction rates start out low because there is
little competition for abundant resources Over
time, that number increases as species become
extinct due to competition, predation, or random
fluctuations in the environment
10The Theory of Island Biogeography
- The number of species on an island is determined
by the balance of extinction and immigration - After some time, the immigration rate and
extinction rate will be equal equilibrium
number of species on island
11Affect of Island Area on Species Equilibrium
- Larger islands have a larger catching area which
results in higher rates of immigration - Larger islands have lower rates of extinction
because of a more diverse habitat more niches to
fill, more resources
12Species-area relationships
- The island biogeography model predicts, and most
people agree, that there is a positive
relationship between the number of species (and
species diversity) and the area of a piece of
land - This is called the Species-area relationship
13Affect of Island Distance from Mainland on
Species Equilibrium
- Nearer islands have higher rates of immigration
because there is a greater chance that organisms
will immigrate to the island
14So, how does this apply to environmental science?
- As humans destroy habitat, we are leaving habitat
fragments behind - This theory can help us answer
- Should we preserve this fragment?
- Would it be better to give up this small fragment
in exchange for saving a larger one? - Is this fragment close enough to untouched land
to be able to be a viable piece of land for
organisms to colonize? - Etc...
15Species Diversity
- Species diversity is a measure of the number of
species there are in an ecosystem plus the
distribution of individuals in all species - The most diverse ecosystems are those that have
the greatest number of species, and the most
even distribution. - The species-area relationship suggests that the
greatest diversity should be in the largest
habitat areas
16Calculation of Species Diversity
- One diversity index is the Shannon-Weiner
Diversity Index - It is calculated as
- H -
- pi the number of individuals in one species
divided by the total number of individuals in all
species
17Calculating Diversity Example
18The good and the bad
- Good
- can compare different ecosystems in different
habitats - reflects number of species and eveness
- Bad
- means nothing by itself
- doesnt reflect biomass or individual size
- no units
19Species Richness
- Species richness is often calculated as the
number of species in an environment - In the previous example, it would be 5