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ECOLOGY The study of living organisms in the natural environment How they interact with one another How the interact with their nonliving environment.

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Presentation on theme: "ECOLOGY The study of living organisms in the natural environment How they interact with one another How the interact with their nonliving environment."— Presentation transcript:

1 ECOLOGY The study of living organisms in the natural environment How they interact with one another How the interact with their nonliving environment

2 Ecosystem Community of organisms + the abiotic environment and how they interact

3 Community All the populations of the different species living and interacting in the same ecosystem 7-spotted lady bird (Adephagia septempunctata) Bean aphids (Aphis fabae) Red ant (Myrmica rubra) and Broom plant (Cytisus scoparius)

4 Species A group of organisms that can breed to produce fully fertile offspring Great White Pelican Pelecanus onocrotalus

5 Population A group of organism of the same species which live in the same habitat at the same time where they can freely interbreed: Same time, same species, same place The black-veined white butterfly (Aporia crataegi) mating

6 Biodiversity The total number of different species in an ecosystem and their relative abundance Worcester City Museums

7 Habitat The characteristics of the type of environment where an organism normally lives. (e.g. a stoney stream, a deciduous temperate woodland, Bavarian beer mats)

8 Energy and organisms Autotrophs Organisms which can synthesise their own complex, energy rich, organic molecules from simple inorganic molecules (e.g. green plants synthesis sugars from CO 2 and H 2 O)

9 Heterotrophs Organisms who must obtain complex, energy rich, organic compounds form the bodies of other organisms (dead or alive) Herbivores Carnivores Omnivores

10 Detritivores Heterotrophic organisms who ingest dead organic matter. (e.g. earthworms, woodlice, millipedes) Earth worm (Lumbricus terrestris)

11 Feeding relationships (Interactions) Predators & prey Herbivory Parasite & host Mutualism Commensalism Large blue butterfly (Maculinea arion)

12 The place of an organism in its environment Niche An organism’s habitat + role + tolerance limits to all limiting factors How does it use the physical environment? ? How does it interact with other species?

13 THE COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE G.F. Gause (1934) If two species, with the same niche, coexist in the same ecosystem, then one will be excluded from the community due to intense competition

14 Niche The niche of a species consists of: Its role in the ecosystem (herbivore, carnivore, producer, etc…) Its tolerance limits (e.g. soil pH, humidity) Its requirements for shelter, nesting sites etc etc, all varying through time

15 Niche Two Types of Niches Fundamental niche: range of conditions and resources a species can tolerate and potentially use (assuming no influence by competition, predation, etc…..) {broad} Realized niche: range of resources a species actually uses (influenced by competition, predation, etc…) {narrow}

16 The niche as a two-dimensional shape Niche represented by a 2-dimensional area Species A

17 Separate niches No overlap of niches. So coexistence is possible Species A Species B

18 Overlapping niches Interspecific competition occurs where the niches overlap Species C Species B

19 Species C Specialisation avoids competition Evolution by natural selection towards separate niches Species B’ Species C’ Specialisation into two separate niches Species B

20 This niche is not big enough for the both of us! Species A Species D Very heavy competition leads to competitive exclusion One species must go

21 Total exclusion Species A has a bigger niche it is more generalist Species E has a smaller niche it is more specialist Specialists, however, do tend to avoid competition Here it is totally swamped by Species A © 2008 Paul Billiet ODWSODWS

22 Example: Warblers Sometimes competitors that eat the same kinds of food and are found in the same places. How do these species live together? Some competitors divide resources by feeding in slightly different ways or slightly different places.

23 Example: Squirrels in Britain The Red Squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) is native to Britain Its population has declined due to: Competitive exclusion Disease Disappearance of hazel coppices and mature conifer forests in lowland Britain Isle of Wight Tourist Guide

24 The Alien The Grey Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) is an alien species Introduced to Britain in about 30 sites between 1876 and 1929 It has easily adapted to parks and gardens replacing the red squirrel Bananas in the Falklands

25 Today’s distribution Red squirrelGrey squirrel

26 Ecosystem Resiliency (stability) Competition among species. Ex. Mussels (good competitors for space in ocean) -Sea stars eat mussels -When sea stars are present, a variety of species is able to live in the same area that mussels live (intertidal zone); increases biodiversity

27 Ecosystem Resiliency (stability) Competition among species Ex. Sea Otters (eat sea urchins) Sea urchins eat kelp Kelp help provide habitat for many aquatic animals What would happen if the sea otter were removed from the ecosystem?

28 Keystone species: Keystone Species: one that is critical to an ecosystem because it affects the survival and number of many other species in it’s community (ex. sea otters and sea stars from previous slide)


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