Predation. Key Topics Types of predation. Effects of predation on prey populations and communities. The Refuge Theory. The keystone Predator Theory.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 53 Notes Community Ecology. What is a Community? A __________ is any assemblage of populations in an area or habitat. Communities differ dramatically.
Advertisements

Rocky Shore1 Intertidal Communities Rocky Shore Communities.
Between the Tides %20jolla&rls=com.microsoft:en-us&oe=UTF- 8&startIndex=&startPage=1&um=1&hl=en&ie=UTF-
Predation – one species feeds on another  enhances fitness of predator but reduces fitness of prey ( +/– interaction)
Keystone species. Rocky intertidal Bodega bay Food web Pisaster feeds on acorn barnacles and mussels in rocky intertidal.
Predation – one species feeds on another  enhances fitness of predator but reduces fitness of prey ( +/– interaction)
1 Community Ecology Chapter Biological Communities Community: all the organisms that live together in a specific place –Evolve together –Forage.
Lecture 20 Competition and Predation 1) Review: intertidal zonation 2) Causes of zonation -Physical and biological factors -Temperature and desiccation.
Community Ecology II: Species Interactions. Ecological communities: Assemblages of two or more species living and interacting in the same area. Species.
Competition.
Ch Communities and Ecosystems. How do organisms interact in a community? Properties of a community: Diversity - variety of different kinds of organisms.
Chapter 10 Marine Ecology Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Marine Ecology Shipley’s Marine Biology.   Ecology is the interaction between organisms and their environment.  These interactions affect the survival.
How Competition Shapes Communities
Ch 53 – Community Ecology. What is a community? A group of populations of different species living close enough to interact.
Biology: 17.2 How Competition Shapes Communities
Rocky Intertidal Zone Community. Intertidal Zone Area of the shore between the highest high tide and lowest low tide.
COMMUNITY ECOLOGY I: BIODIVERSITY Community: Any assemblage of populations [of plants and/or animals] in a given area or habitat.
Factors affecting Rocky Intertidal Zonation Patterns Intertidal Zones – Immersion in seawater – Emmersion in Air – Tidal Patterns Biobands of intertidal.
Biol 302 Introduction1 COMMUNITY STRUCTURE 1.The Influence of COMPETITION 2.The Influence of PREDATION (HERBIVORY) Reading: General through cpt 23, and.
Levels of Ecological Organization in Freshwater Systems Population Community Ecosystem.
Next… Since we know some of the habitats and organisms that live in marine environments, we can also study their interactions (w/ each other and w/i the.
Ecology: Lecture 17 Community structure.
Keystone or Foundation Species?
Marine Biology Intertidal Ecology: Focus on Biological Interactions.
Marine Ecology May 7, 2007 Between the tides: Interactions 1.
Chapter 5: Interactions in the Ecosystem
18 Species Diversity in Communities. 18 Species Diversity in Communities Resource Partitioning Nonequilibrium Theories The Consequences of Diversity Case.
So in conclusion, what can we say about Abiotic factors, especially climate? (1)Abiotic factors influence species’ distribution and abundance But it also.
AP Biology Community Ecology population ecosystem community biosphere organism.
Lecture 9 – INTERTIDAL ZONATION BIOLOGICAL FACTORS.
Definitions Ecology defined by interactions and interconnections – with own species, other species, environment; organisms affect each other, environment;
Unit 2 - Ecology Shaping Communities. Niche : an organism’s way of life and everything they interact with. With what organisms do you share a niche? With.
Chapter 53 – Community Ecology What is a community? A community is a group of populations of various species living close enough for potential interaction.
Top Down or Bottom Up? Bottom Up Control  resources control community N  V  H  P Top Down Control  Predators control the community N  V  H  P Top.
Intertidal Glory Christen Foehring 11/12/09.  Area of the shore between mean high water and mean low water  Also known as the littoral zone.
Sea Otters A Keystone Species By Brendan Delia. Basic Info about Sea Otters SCIENTIFIC CLASSIFICATION: Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata.
1 Shaping Communities Shaping Communities 5.3 Niche  a species way of life, or role/function the species plays in its environment… “occupation”
COMMUNITY STRUCTURE. Community Structure Paine ‘80 - Keystone Species Keystone species -a relatively low biomass species that is a major factor in determining.
Population Interactions Competition (--) when both species suffer from an association Predation (+-) when one benefits and one suffers Commensalism (+0)
An Introduction to Zonation
R. W. Baird Predator (usually silent) Familiar non-predator (frequently vocal) Unfamiliar non-predator (frequently vocal) Orcinus orca calls K. Starks.
Chapter 17 Species Interactions and Community Structure
Understanding PopulationsSection 2 Section 2: How Species Interact with Each Other Preview Bellringer Objectives An Organism’s Niche Ways in Which Species.
1 Ecological Communities: Change & Balance. 2 Ecological Niche Ecological Niche - Description of the role a species plays in a biological community, or.
Ecological Succession
An Introduction to Zonation. Rocky Intertidal Ecology Rocky - hard substrate Intertidal - area between high tide and low tide marks Ecology - the study.
Community Ecology BDC321 Mark J Gibbons, Room 4.102, BCB Department, UWC Tel: Image acknowledgements –
Objective  Explain how population sizes are regulated.
Ecosystems Structure and Dynamics Community Ecology The scientific study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environments.
Community Ecology Interactions between Populations of different species Interspecific Interactions and Community Structure Disturbances and Nonequilibrium.
Community Ecology I. Introduction II. Multispecies Interactions with a Trophic Level A. Additive Competitive Effects. Vandermeer 1969 Dynamics in 4-species.
Ecology 8310 Population (and Community) Ecology "Indirect Effects" A terminological milieu Classic indirect effects (1 example) Higher order interactions.
Why do populations vary in size?
Ecosystems and Ecosystem Management. Basic Characteristics of Ecosystems Sustained life on Earth is a characteristic of ecosystems, not of individual.
Which species benefits from its interactions?
COMMUNITY ECOLOGY I: BIODIVERSITY
Population Controls and Community Succession How biotic potential and environmental resistance control population dynamics. The mechanisms of population.
Populations and Communities Section 3 Section 3: Shaping Communities Preview Bellringer Key Ideas Carving a Niche Competing for Resources Ecosystem Resiliency.
Populations and Resources. Population Is a group of organisms of one species that lives in the same place, at the same time, and can successfully reproduce.
Predation – one species feeds on another  enhances fitness of predator but reduces fitness of prey ( +/– interaction)
What questions do ecologists ask about communities? Structure Dynamics Function How many species? How do they compare in abundance? Who eats who? How do.
Understanding PopulationsSection 2 An Organism’s Niche A niche is the unique position occupied by a species, both in terms of its physical use of its habitat.
Ecology. Patterns in the Environment Where an organism lives is called it’s Habitat. It is shaped by the organisms interaction with abiotic and biotic.
A) Review of Hypotheses for maintenance of diversity
Lecture Topic: Lecture Topic: Basic ecological principles of competition and the associated affects on marine community structure.
Community Ecology Chapter 54 Eric Ribbens Western Illinois University
Option C Advanced Ecology.
Top-Down vs. Bottom-Up Control
Predation – one species feeds on another  enhances
Presentation transcript:

Predation

Key Topics Types of predation. Effects of predation on prey populations and communities. The Refuge Theory. The keystone Predator Theory.

Types of Predation Herbivory - eating plant tissue. –Browsers –grazers Carnivory - eating of animal tissue. –Predation. –Parasitiods

Some Effects of Predation Set distribution limits of prey. Set carrying capacity. Influence age/size frequencies within prey populations. Influence diversity of the community.

Moose and Wolves on Isle Royale After wolves discover a moose population on an isolated island, the moose population attains a lower, more stable carrying capacity.

The Malthusian Dilemma. Because population growth potential is geometric and world is finite, there is a struggle for existence. Darwin reasoned that struggle should be most intense among most similar organisms - hence competition should predominate. The competitive exclusion principal maintains that no two species could indefinitely occupy the same niche, i.e. have the same resource use. Therefore, two related questions have driven much of the work in benthic ecology: –How do natural enemies coexist? –How can so many similar species coexist? (Why does not competition eliminate similar species?)

Two possible answers The Refuge Theory is one hypothetical answer to the question of how predators and prey can coexist indefinitely. The Keystone Predator Theory is one hypothetical answer to how similar species (potential competitors) can coexist.

The Refuge Hypothesis In all stable predator - prey systems, prey attain an age/size refuge or a spatial refuge. “Refuged” prey produce young that replenish their population and provide food for predators. Refuges depend on adaptive limitations of the predators, e.g. intolerance of exposure at low tide, limited prey handling abilities. In the following examples, “intertidal zonation” is attributed to spatial refuges.

The Case of Whelks and Barnacles, Connell 1970 Location San Juan Island, Washington. Predators, three species of whelks, Thais emarginata, T. lamellsoa, T. canaliculata. Prey, three species of barnacles, Chthamalus dalli, Balanus glandula, Semibalanus cariosus. Larvae of all three species occur over a broad range of shore levels, but adults show restricted vertical zonation. Observations and experiments indicate that Balanus adults reside in a spatial refuge, Semibalanus attains and age/size refuge.

Whelks

The whelk -barnacle system on two Continents. In contrast to Scotland, where competition was the limiting factor, Washington shores had intense predation. Barnacle zones are different types of prey refuges.

Connell’s Evidence Whelks do not forage on the highest shore levels. Balanus adults survive well in the upper zone above the reach of the whelks. Balanus can survive in the lower, Semibalanus zone only if protected from whelks. (Cage experiment) In the lower zone, large, adult Semibalanus survive attacks of whelks. Smaller barnacles, Semibalanus juveniles and Balanus adults, are preferentially eaten over other prey. Therefore, the upper zone is a spatial refuge for Balanus, the lower zone is an age-size refuge for Semibalanus.

The Mytilus-Pisaster interaction, Paine 1974,1976 Site Olympic Peninsula, Washington State Prey, the sea mussel Mytilus californianus. The predator Pisaster ochraceus. Pisaster extirpates mussel on lower shores levels, promoting diversity. Mytilus attains a spatial refuge on upper shore levels, and, infrequently, an age-size refuge on lower shore levels.

Predation by Sea Stars Pisaster ochraceous

Paine and “The System”

Photograph of the “Glacier Experiment” After sea stars were removed from foreground area, mussels took over lower shore levels.

Apparent spatial and age/size refugia.

Field survey results showing size dependent predation

Statement of Keystone Predator Hypothesis Keystone predators are characteristically large, or numerous consumers that prey an assemblage of competing species. Mortality on a dominant competitor species keeps its numbers in check, freeing resources for subordinate species. Therefore, keystones promote coexistence of competitors at lower trophic levels. Experimental removal of the predator leads to transformation of the community. Certain competitors take over the limiting resource.

Significance of Keystone Predator Hypothesis Arose in the context of the Malthusian dilemma. An example of the importance of indirect effects in complex food webs. Explains how predators can enhance the diversity of a community.

Indirect effects in food webs Pisaster indirectly affects barnacles (Balanus spp.) and algae by preferential preying on their principal, superior competitor, mussels (Mytilus californianus), and by preying on other consumers of the barnacles.

Photograph of the “Glacier”

Diagram of the “Glacier Experiment”

Contradictions of the Refuge Hypothesis: Panulirus-Mytilus Interaction. The predator Panulirus sp. the spiny lobster The prey Mytilus sp. the mussel

Time lapse photography rig in the intertidal zone at low tide, Catalina Is.

Time Lapse Sequence

Lobster Exclosure Experiments on Red Algae “Turfs” The the lobster exclosures, mussels survive and crowd out the algae, supporting the keystone predator hypothesis.

Lobster exclosure experiment in a mussel bed. Lobster predation within mussel beds affects size frequency distributions without significantly affecting percent covers of mussels. Marsh 1986 and Wootton 1993 present other examples of predator effects within mussel zones.

Some mussel beds fall completely within the foraging range of the highly mobile lobsters. See Menge and Lubchenco 1981 for discussion

Absolute age size refuges: rarely, if ever, attained.

Conclusion The Keystone predator hypothesis is supported by the fidnings about the Panulirus-Mytilus interaction While the refugia concept fits for some predator prey systems, it does not apply to all, e.g. the Panulirus-Mytilus interaction Rather than invoking refuges, the most recent formulations of theory look at balances between rates of prey input (recruitment) and loss (predation) to explain co-existence.