Chapter 4: Evolution, Biological Communities, and Species Interactions Advanced Environmental Science.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 4! Evolution, Biological Communities, and Species Interactions
Advertisements

COMMUNITY ECOLOGY.
Populations, Communities, and Species Interaction
Chapter Community Ecology: The Interactions of Different Populations I. What is a Community? - An assemblage of species living close enough together.
COMMUNITY ECOLOGY.
Community Interactions
Biology II - Community Ecology. Community Concept A community is an assemblage of populations interacting with one another within the same environment.
Community Ecology Chapter 47 Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Biology, 9th ed, Sylvia Mader
Community Ecology Chapter 47 Mader: Biology 8th Ed.
Chapter 3: Species Populations, Interactions and Communities
CHAPTER 53 – COMMUNITY ECOLOGY Themes: Interaction with the environment Regulation Scientific Inquiry Evolution.
What is a Community? A community is defined as an assemblage of species living close enough together for potential interaction. Communities differ in their.
CHAPTER 53 COMMUNITY ECOLOGY Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Section B1: Interspecific Interactions and Community.
Chapter 41 - Community Interactions
Community Ecology Chapter 53. Community - group of species living close enough for interaction. Species richness – # of species a community contains;
1 Community Ecology Chapter Biological Communities A community consists of all the species that occur together at any particular locality.
COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS. COMMUNITY-LEVEL ECOLOGY – COMMUNITY DEF  ?? DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS OF A COMMUNITY – DIVERSITY (BIO-DIVERSITY) – PREVALENT.
Populations, Communities, and Species Interaction Chapter 3.
Biological Communities and Species Interaction
Populations, Communities, and Species Interaction
Chapter 5 Ecosystems and Living Organisms Lake Victoria, East Africa.
Chapter Three: Populations, Communities, & Species Interactions
1 Biological Communities and Species Interactions.
Biological Communities and Species Interaction
Ecological Niche Species Interactions Community Properties
Chapter 3 Lecture Outline
Community Ecology: Structure, Species Interactions, Succession, and Sustainability Chapter 8 Mrs Gullickson Science Chapter 8 Mrs Gullickson Science Dr.
Community Structure: Appearance and Species Diversity
Community Ecology Chapter 54. Community An assemblage of populations of various species living close enough for potential interactions.
Community Ecology.
Interactions Within Ecosystems
Community Ecology Chapter 53. Community - group of species living close enough for interaction. Species richness – # of species a community contains;
COMMUNITY ECOLOGY Populations of different species that live and interact at same place and same time.
AP Biology Community Ecology population ecosystem community biosphere organism.
PACKET #81 CHAPTERS #54 & #50 Community Ecology. Review & Introduction Community  Assemblage of populations, of different species, that live and interact.
Environmental Science Inquiry and Applications Cunningham • Cunningham
Biological Communities & Species Interaction. Who Lives Where and Why? nCnCritical Factors and Tolerance Limits 1. nutrients, temperature, water supply,
Copyright © 2005 Brooks/Cole — Thomson Learning Biology, Seventh Edition Solomon Berg Martin Chapter 52 Community Ecology.
Chapter 53 – Community Ecology What is a community? A community is a group of populations of various species living close enough for potential interaction.
Ecosystems and Living Organisms Chapter 4. Communities Different populations of organisms that live and interact together in the same place at the same.
Chapter 4 Ecosystems and Living Organisms Ecosystems and Living Organisms.
Community Ecology Chapter 20 Table of Contents Section 1 Species Interactions Section 2 Patterns in Communities.
Community Ecology Chapter 20 Table of Contents Section 1 Species Interactions Section 2 Patterns in Communities.
Biological Niche An organism’s Niche describes the full biotic and abiotic conditions in which an organism lives – Biotic factors: Predators Prey competition.
Community Ecology Ms. Klinkhachorn September 29, 2010 AP Biology.
Chapter 4 Evolution, Biological Communities & Species Interactions Section 4.1.
Life on Earth BIOLOGY101BIOLOGY101 Ecology: Community Interactions.
Cunningham - Cunningham - Saigo: Environmental Science 7 th Ed. Biological Communities and Species Interaction Chapter 4.
COMMUNITY ECOLOGY CHAPTER 3. SPECIES INTERACTIONS Community: all the interacting organisms in one area Symbiosis: the relationship between different species.
48: Community Interactions I. Types of Interaction A.Neutral: Two populations do not significantly affect one another. B. Commensalism: One population.
Chapter 53 ~ Community Ecology
Interspecific interactions Competition (-/-) Predation (+/-) Herbivory (+/-) Symbiosis Mutualism (+/+) Commensalism (+/0) Parasitism (+/-)
Copyright © 2005 Brooks/Cole — Thomson Learning Biology, Seventh EditionCHAPTER 52 Community Ecology Copyright © 2005 Brooks/Cole — Thomson Learning Biology,
COMMUNITY ECOLOGY CH 54 Community: a group of populations of species interacting.
1 Evolution, Biological Communities, and Species Interactions.
Community Ecology: Structure, Species Interactions, Succession and Sustainability Chapter 8 “What is this balance of nature that ecologists talk about?”
Community Ecology Chapter 54. Community An assemblage of populations of various species living close enough for potential interactions.
Ecology Communities. Community Vocab. Community = all organisms in area Species richness = # different species determined by - abiotic factors determined.
Chapter 37.1 – 37.6 COMMUNITY ECOLOGY. What you need to know! The community level of organization The role of competitive exclusion in interspecific competition.
Environmental Science PowerPoint Lecture Principles of Environmental Science - Inquiry and Applications, 1st Edition by William Cunningham and Mary Ann.
Community Ecology.
Community Ecology Chapter 37.1 – 37.6.
Community Ecology A community is a group of populations of different species living close enough to interact.
Communities.
Evolution, Biological Communities, and Species Interactions
Ch. 4: Evolution, Biological Communities, and Species Interactions
Community Ecology & Interspecific Interactions
Unit II The Living World
Biological Communities and Species Interaction
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 4: Evolution, Biological Communities, and Species Interactions Advanced Environmental Science

EVOLUTION PRODUCES SPECIES DIVERSITY Section 4.1

Summary: artificial selection natural selection adaptation in ecosystems speciation evolution still at work

Artificial Selection

Natural Selection adaptation: the acquisition of traits that allow a species to survive in its environment natural selection: the process of better-selected individuals passing their traits on to the next generations

selection pressures: factors in the environment that favor successful reproduction of individuals possessing heritable traits and that reduce viability/fertility of individuals not possessing those traits (examples…)

critical factor: the single factor in shortest supply relative to demand tolerance limits: minimum and maximum levels for each environmental factor

Adaptation in Ecosystems habitat vs. niche

competitive exclusion principle: no two species can occupy the same niche for long (the more successful will exclude the other) resource partitioning: allows several species to utilize the same resource and coexist (examples…)

Speciation speciation: development of new species

allopatric speciation: geographic barriers cause reproductive isolation sympatric speciation: biological or behavioral barriers cause reproductive isolation (once isolation occurs species diverge genetically)

Evolution is still at work… Galapagos island finches pesticide resistant insects drug-resistant pathogens

SPECIES INTERACTIONS SHAPE BIOLOGICAL COMMUNITIES Section 4.2

Competition intraspecific interspecific

Predation Predator-prey relationships exert selection pressures that favor evolutionary adaptation. Predators become more efficient at searching and feeding, and prey become more effective at escape and avoidance.

coevolution: species exert selective pressures on each other and gradually change as a result

Predator Avoidance Batesian mimicry: species that are harmless resemble poisonous or distasteful ones Müllerian mimicry: two unpalatable or dangerous species look alike

Batesian mimicry

Symbiosis mutualism

Symbiosis commensalism

Symbiosis parasitism

keystone species: a species that plays a critical role in a biological community that is out of proportion to its abundance

COMMUNITY PROPERTIES AFFECT SPECIES POPULATIONS Section 4.3

primary productivity: rate of biomass production abundance: total number of organisms in a community diversity: number of different species, niches, or genetic variation present in a community

complexity: the number of species at each trophic level and the number of trophic levels in a community

Stability and Resiliency in Ecosystems constancy: lack of fluctuations in composition or functions inertia: resistance to perturbations renewal: ability to repair damage after disturbance

edge effects: changes encountered at the boundary between two ecosystems ecotone: a boundary between two types of biological community *interior area is significant*

COMMUNITIES ARE DYNAMIC AND CHANGE OVER TIME Section 4.4

Ecological Succession primary succession: succession that occurs in an area where no community existed before secondary succession: succession that occurs in an area where the existing community is disturbed

pioneer species: the first species to colonize a new area

climax community: the community that develops last and stays the longest represents the maximum complexity and stability possible depends on climate and soil

disturbance: any force that disrupts the established patterns of species diversity and abundance, community structure or community properties disturbance-adapted species: species that depend on disturbances to succeed