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Community Interactions

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Presentation on theme: "Community Interactions"— Presentation transcript:

1 Community Interactions
Chapter 7 Community Interactions

2 7-1 COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND SPECIES DIVERSITY

3 Community Community: populations of all species living and interacting in an area at a particular time

4 Four Characteristics of Community Structure
Physical Appearance: size and distribution of its population and species Species Diversity/Richness: number of different species Species Abundance: number of individuals of each species Niche Structure: number of niches, how they compare, and how they interact

5 Differing Physical Appearances
Patch Effects: most large communities usually consist of a mosaic of vegetation “patches” Edge Effects: differences in physical appearance at boundaries between ecosystems

6 Species Diversity Species Rich Environments
Tropical Rain Forests Coral Reefs Deep Sea Large Tropical Lakes Tend to have high species diversity but low species abundance Factors that Affect Diversity Latitude (terrestrial) – distance from equator Depth (aquatic) Pollution (aquatic)

7 Species Abundance Determined by: Rate at which new species immigrate
Rate at which species become extinct

8 Ecological Niche vs. Habitat
Niche: role an organism plays in an ecosystem niche is like an "occupation“ – a species’ interactions with habitat and other organisms (their role in food web) Habitat: actual location where an organism lives habitat is like an "address"

9 7-2 GENERAL TYPES OF SPECIES

10 GENERAL TYPES OF SPECIES
Generalist Species Specialist Species Native Species Nonnative Species Indicator Species Keystone Species

11 Generalist vs. Specialist
Generalist Species have broad niches, can live many places, use a variety of resources e.g., dandelions, cockroaches, coyotes, humans Specialist Species have narrow niches, live only in specific places e.g., spotted owls, giant pandas © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

12 Native vs. Nonnative Species
Native Species: species that normally live & thrive in a particular ecosystem Nonnative Species: also called exotic, invasive, or alien species originate in other ecosystem deliberate or accidental introduction by humans causes problems may thrive and crowd out native species

13 The Case of the Killer Bees
1957 Brazil imported wild African bees to help increase honey production Displaced domestic honeybees Actually reduced honey production Moved north in Central America Established populations in Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Puerto Rico, and California

14 Snakehead Fish

15 CANE TOADS!

16 The Simpsons! Bart vs. Australia

17 Indicator Species Indicator Species: species that serve as early warnings that a community or ecosystem is being damaged Birds are good indicator species Found everywhere Respond to environmental change quickly northern spotted owls are indicators of healthy old–growth forest Fish are good indicator species in aquatic ecosystems (i.e. trout)

18 “The loss of a keystone species is like a drill accidentally striking a power line. It causes lights to go out all over.” – E.O. Wilson Keystone Species Keystone Species: species that play a critical role in an ecosystem Ex: sea otters are keystone species because they prevent sea urchins from depleting kelp beds Ex: flying foxes are keystone species because they pollinate tropical trees and disperse seeds, such as durian fruit trees

19 7-3 SPECIES INTERACTIONS: COMPETITION AND PREDATION

20 Species Interactions The effects of one species on another may be negative, positive, or neutral Five kinds of interactions: Interspecific competition Predation Parasitism Mutualism Commensalism

21 Intra- vs. Inter- specific competition
Intraspecific Competition – members of the SAME species compete for resources Interspecific Competition – members from 2 or more DIFFERENT species compete for resources When two or more species use the same limited resource (food, space, etc.) they may adversely affect each other niche overlap Ex: fire ants & native ants in North America

22 Relative population density Each species grown alone
No Competition High Low Relative population density 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 Days Each species grown alone Paramecium aurelia Paramecium caudatum

23 Interspecific Competition
High Paramecium aurelia Relative population density Paramecium caudatum Low 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 Days Both species grown together

24 Resource Partitioning
Species with similar resource requirements can coexist because they use limited resources: at different times in different ways in different places © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

25 Resource Partitioning
Where are the 2 species competing? Why is there no competition here?

26 Resource Partitioning
© Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

27 Resource Partitioning Example
Five species of insect–eating warblers coexist in spruce forests of Maine: feed in different portions of trees consume somewhat different insects © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

28 Predation Members of one species (predator) feed on another species (prey); + / – Ex: lion feeding on zebra © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

29 Predator-Prey Relationship
What do predators do to increase their chances of getting a meal? What do prey do to avoid being eaten?

30 Predator-Prey Relationship
Predators get better at catching prey Prey get better at avoiding capture Similar to an “arms race” Ex: During the Cold War, the US and the USSR tried to intimidate the other with bigger and better weapons

31 Predators Pursuit Faster (cheetahs) Better eyesight (eagles)
Hunting in packs (wolves) Ambush Camouflage (praying mantis) Mimicry (alligator snapping turtles)

32 Prey Camouflage Ex: walking stick Warning colors Ex: poison dart frog
Chemical warfare Ex: skunk Mimicry Ex: king snake Behavior Ex: blowfish

33 7-4 SPECIES INTERACTIONS: PARASITISM, MUTUALISM, AND COMMENSALISM

34 Parasitism One organism (parasite) lives on part of another organism (host) + / – Ex: flea living on a dog © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

35 Mutualism Two species interact in a way that benefits both + / +
Ex: lichens (algae & fungi) Ex: clownfish & anemones Ex: ants & acacias © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

36 Commensalism One organism benefits from another, but neither helps nor harms the other organism + / 0 Ex: epiphyte growing on a tree © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

37 Species Interactions - +
The effects of one species on another may be negative, positive, or neutral five kinds of interactions: POPULATION A POPULATION B COMPETITION - PREDATION + PARASITISM COMMENSALISM MUTUALISM

38 7-5 ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION: COMMUNITIES IN TRANSITION

39 Ecological Succession
Succession: gradual & fairly predictable change in species composition over time © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

40 Primary Succession © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

41 Primary Succession Type of succession that occurs where there was no ecosystem before Occurs on rocks, cliffs, and sand dunes Pioneer species: the first organism to colonize any newly available area and begin the process of ecological succession

42 Primary Succession Primary Succession: gradual establishment of biotic communities in an area where no life existed before Ex: succession on newly formed islands & after the retreat of a glacier Early Communities: lichens & mosses colonize bare rock Mid Communities: small herbs & shrubs colonize Late Communities: tree species colonize

43 Lichens Parking Lot Mosses

44 Secondary Succession © Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

45 Secondary Succession Secondary Succession: gradual reestablishment of biotic communities in an area where a biotic community was previously present Ex: "old field succession"

46 Secondary Succession: Mount St. Helens
Erupted in 1980 44,460 acres were burned and flattened After the eruption, plants began to colonize the debris

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52 Disturbance Disturbance: a distinct event that disrupts an ecosystem or community disturbance initiates secondary succession Natural disturbances: fires, hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, & floods Human-caused disturbances: deforestation, overgrazing, plowing

53 Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis: moderate disturbances in communities promote greater species diversity than small or major disturbances

54 Climax Community Climax community: the final and stable community in an ecosystem Will continue to change in small ways, but will remain primarily the same over time (unless disturbed)

55 The Circle of Life in Secondary Succession

56 7-6 ECOLOGICAL STABILITY AND SUSTAINABILITY
Stability - complex networks of positive and negative feedbacks loops

57 Ecosystem Stability Inertia/Persistence: the ability of an ecosystem to resist being disturbed Constancy: the ability of a living sysmte such as a population to keep its numbers within the limits imposed by available resources Resilience: the ability of an ecosystem to “bounce back” after it has been disturbed

58 Precautionary Principle
We should try to prevent potential harm to an ecosystem even though we don’t understand all of the cause-and-effects “better safe than sorry”


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