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-0+ - CompetitionAmensalismPredation, parasitism 0 AmensalismCommensalism + Predation, parasitism CommensalismMutualism Types of interactions.

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Presentation on theme: "-0+ - CompetitionAmensalismPredation, parasitism 0 AmensalismCommensalism + Predation, parasitism CommensalismMutualism Types of interactions."— Presentation transcript:

1 -0+ - CompetitionAmensalismPredation, parasitism 0 AmensalismCommensalism + Predation, parasitism CommensalismMutualism Types of interactions

2 Consumer-Resource Interactions All life forms are both consumers and victims of consumers. Consumer-resource interactions organize biological communities into consumer chains (food chains): –consumers benefit at the expense of their resources –populations are controlled from below by resources and from above by consumers –The relative importance of top-down versus bottom up control of populations is an important focus of ecological research

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4 Some Definitions Predators catch individuals and consume them, removing them from the prey population. Parasites consume parts of a living prey organism, or host: –parasites may be external or internal –a parasite may negatively affect the host but does not directly remove it from the population

5 More Definitions Parasitoids consume the living tissues of their hosts, eventually killing them: –parasitoids combine traits of parasites and predators Herbivores eat whole plants or parts of plants: –may act as predators (eating whole plants) or as parasites (eating parts of plants): grazers eat grasses and herbaceous vegetation browsers eat woody vegetation

6 Predation

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8 Theory: Lotka-Volterra Equations. P = Predator population size V = Prey resource dV/dt = rV – σPV dV/dt = 0  P=r/σ Geometric increase of prey (resource) in absence of predator; subtract predation, where σ is catching efficiency. dP/dt = βVP – qP dP/dt = 0  V=q/β Geometric decrease of predators in absence of prey; Predation loss of prey corrected for assimilation efficiency, or " β ".

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14 Solution: Limit cycles (periodic solutions) such that Species can coexist, but Random walk to extinction, No interaction of prey with food supply (& no time lags), Predator mortality independent of prey density.

15 Testing the theory -- Gause’s Paramecia

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17 Testing the theory -- Huffaker’s oranges

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21 Case studies – Opuntia and Cactoblastis

22 Cactoblastis chronology 1839 Opuntia stricta in pot to Australia f/Texas or Florida 1900 10,000,000 acres 1925 60,000,000 acres (i.e. area twice size NC) increasing at 1,000,000 acres per year. Too dense to walk, 3-6' high. Sheep would not eat, horses could not traverse. Cactoblastis - northern Argentina 2750 eggs in 1925; 2x10 6 eggs out in 19 locations 1930-31 Opuntia ravaged, mostly back to grass 1932-33 Opuntia recovered some 1935-40 Cactoblastis recovered and expanded >1940 Only scattered Opuntia plants remained

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24 Klamath weed and Chrysolina quadrigemina

25 L-V Assumptions Growth of victim population is limited only by predation (exponential growth) Predator is a specialist on victim (starves in absence of victims) Individual predators can consume an infinite number of victims Predator and victim encounter one other randomly in a homogeneous environment

26 Carrying capacity

27 Functional response

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34 Keystone predators – Piaster and Mytillus

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