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Ecology: Lecture 1 Introduction. Photo: Stanford University News Service.

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Presentation on theme: "Ecology: Lecture 1 Introduction. Photo: Stanford University News Service."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ecology: Lecture 1 Introduction

2 Photo: Stanford University News Service

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6 What is ecology?  “Ecology works at characterizing the patterns seen in nature, studying the complex interactions among organisms and their environments, and understanding the mechanisms involved in biological diversity.”

7 1. Characterizing the patterns seen in nature  Example: The River Continuum  Many differences are seen between the upstream and downstream stretches of a river  Different types of invertebrates  Different species of fish

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9 2. Studying complex interactions between organisms and their environment  Example: What causes the differences seen between upstream and downstream sites?  Possibilities???

10 3. Understanding the mechanisms involved in biodiversity  Why do some reaches of a river tend to have greater diversity than others? Why do some rivers have greater diversity than others?  Why do tropical rain forests and coral reefs have relatively high species diversity compared to other ecosystems?

11 The absolute geographical boundaries of a species are set by abiotic factors  Global scale: Adelie penguins would overheat in the tropics

12 The absolute geographical boundaries of a species are set by abiotic factors  Local scale: Giant, green anemones are found in pooling water in the intertidal, but not on vertical rock faces

13 Within limits set by abiotic factors, biological interactions affect the presence & abundance of species  What are some of these biological interactions?

14 Why are there no polar bears in the Antarctic?

15 Shelford’s law of tolerance   What do the axes mean? What do different parts of the curve tell us about the species?

16 Seasonal or geographical shifts in tolerance   What do the three different curves represent? (>1 possibility)   What does the arrow represent?   What types of values belong on the x-axis?

17 Winter distribution of the Eastern phoebe: Blue line: -4º isotherm, minimum average temp. January Blue patches: Deviation of phoebe distribution from -4º isotherm.

18 How might natural selection affect a species’ tolerance curve?  Within a single generation?  After several generations?

19 Global warming and species shifts  Example: malaria Diagram from Bellarmine University website


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