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Community Ecology Chapter 9.

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Presentation on theme: "Community Ecology Chapter 9."— Presentation transcript:

1 Community Ecology Chapter 9

2 r vs. K strategists Population density Limiting factors Range of tolerance

3 CLIMATE

4 What else influences climate?

5 Biomes

6 Zones of Tolerance

7

8 Create your own graph in order to interpret the data below.
The data shows the percentage of survivors in ponds with different densities of tadpoles. Pool # %Oxygen % Survival 1 46 72 2 76 6 3 90 4 10 5 33 83 18 31

9 Succession Temporal patterns in communities
Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and extinction) Non-seasonal, continuous, directional

10 Succession can occur under 2 different conditions
Primary succession In an area that previously did not support any community Example: terrestrial habitat devoid of soil Secondary succession In an area that previously supported a community, but now does not Example: terrestrial habitat where vegetation was destroyed, but soil remained

11 Primary succession – bare rock
Volcanic eruptions, lava flow Glaciers

12 Secondary Succession - soil
Floods Fires Mudslides

13 Rate of succession Primary - slow - may take 1000s of years
Secondary - faster - fraction of the time to reach same stage

14 Succession begins… First community comprised of r-selected species - pioneer species

15 r-selected species Good colonizers Tolerant of harsh conditions
Reproduce quickly in unpredictable environs Example: lichens

16 Pioneer species Rapidly carry out life processes and begin to modify habitat Extract resources from bare rock Break up/fragment rock with roots Collect wind-blown dust, particles Waste products accumulate Die and decompose Soil development begins

17 Continuing change Colonizers joined by other species suited for modified habitat Eventually replace colonizers Better competitors in modified habitat Less r-selected, more K-selected

18 More change Communities gradually become dominated by K-selected species Good competitors, able to coexist with others for long periods of time

19 Stability Climax community Communities become stabilized
Reach equilibrium Little or no change in species composition, abundance over long periods of time End stage of succession

20 Will climax stage be reached?
Slow succession most common, climax stage almost never achieved Community usually affected by some major disturbance (e.g., fire) before climax stage is reached Resets succession, forces it to start again from some earlier stage

21 Terrestrial succession

22

23 According to the graph, what do alders do for the advancement of succession in this forest?

24 Lake or pond succession

25 Turn to page 63 in your textbook and answer the two Data Analysis lab questions.


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