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Community Ecology

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Drawback limited applicability to marine organisms. Glacial History of North America ... World Biomes. 3. Productivity hypothesis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Ecology


1
Community Ecology
  • Brooker Chapter 58

2
Community Ecology
  • Community Biodiversity
  • Time, Area, and Productivity
  • Estimating diversity
  • Community Development
  • Succession

3
The Nature of Communities
  • Communities vary in size
  • Lack precise boundaries
  • Rarely completely isolated
  • Communities can be nested within communities
  • A rotting log within a forest

4
Community structure and functioning is complex
Connections to the size of the acorn crop
5
Community Biodiversity
  • Species richness
  • Number of species within a community
  • Species diversity
  • Relative importance of each species within a
    community
  • Diversity Indexes

6
Species richness
  • Number of species in each community
  • Number of species of most taxa varies according
    to geographic range
  • Increasing from polar to temperate to maximum in
    tropical areas
  • Increases by topographical variation
  • Reduced by peninsular effect (distance from the
    main body of land)

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8
  • Mountains contain a large diversity of habitats
    hence, they support a greater biodiversity.

9
Three hypotheses for polar-equatorial gradient
  • Time hypothesis
  • Temperate regions have more recently recovered
    from glaciations
  • Resident species have not evolved to exploit
    vacant niches or species have not migrated back
    into now unglaciated areas
  • Support more worms in comparable unglaciated
    lakes than glaciated
  • Drawback limited applicability to marine
    organisms

10
Glacial History of North America
  • Pleistocene Ice Age began 110,00 ybp
  • Glacial maximum 12,000 ybp
  • Glacial melt raises sea levels and creates lakes
    and small seas

11
  • Area hypothesis
  • Larger areas have more species because they can
    support larger populations and a greater range of
    habitats
  • Support significant relationship between insect
    diversity and host tree range (species area
    effect)
  • Problem there are not more species in Asia,
    tundra is largest biome but low richness, open
    ocean with largest volume has fewer species than
    tropical surface waters

12
World Biomes
13
3. Productivity hypothesis
  • Greater production of plants results in greater
    overall species richness
  • Support plants grow better where it is warm and
    wet and species richness in trees can be
    predicted by the evapotranspiration rate
  • Problems some tropical seas have low
    productivity but high richness, sub-Antarctic
    Ocean has high productivity but low species
    richness

14
  • Why doesnt the species richness of trees
    increase in mountainous areas of the west as it
    does for birds?

15
  • Tropical rain forests are more species rich than
    northern regions of the world
  • What are some factors that might account for this?

16
Species Abundance
  • Species richness is a useful measure (and can be
    misused)
  • Species abundance tells us another dimension of
    community diversity
  • Its take into account the population size of each
    species
  • Identifies dominant species

17
Species Richness and Abundance of a Swamp Forest
on Marylands Eastern Shore
18
Forest Biodiversity
  • Old growth forest in the Shenandoah Mountains of
    Virginia
  • 50,000 trees represented by 10 species.
  • Managed forest, recently clear cut
  • 45,000 trees are maple and birch
  • Only 1/10th of the forest is represented by the
    remaining 8 species

19
Which forest is more diverse?
  • Where is the diversity is more observable?
  • The forest is more ecologically stable
  • Each tree species provides food and shelter for
    different bird, animal, and insect species

20
  • Species diversity has two components
  • Species richness how many different species are
    present in a habitat
  • Relative abundance total number of individuals
    of each species present
  • Diversity Indices
  • Index 1 Species/ square root individuals
    emphasizes species richness
  • Index 2 takes into account the relative
    abundance

21
Calculating species diversity
  • Shannon diversity index measures the diversity
    in a community
  • pi proportion of individuals belonging to
    species i
  • ln natural logarithm
  • S is a summation sign

22
  • For a hypothetical community of 5 species and 100
    total individuals
  • Values range for real communities falls between
    1.5 and 3.5
  • Higher the value, the greater the diversity

23
Table 58.1
http//www.afandpa.org/Template.cfm?sectionForest
ry
24
Species richness and community stability
  • Eltons diversity-stability hypothesis
    disturbances in a diverse or species-rich
    community would be cushioned by large numbers of
    interacting species and would not produce as
    drastic an effect as it would on a less diverse
    community
  • 11 year study examined species richness and
    stability in grassland plots
  • Found year-to-year variation in plant community
    biomass lower in plots with greater species
    richness

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  • Are stable communities more diverse than unstable
    communities?
  • Intermediate-disturbance hypothesis
  • Highest diversities are maintained in communities
    with intermediate levels of disturbance
  • At high rates of disturbance, only r-selected
    species would survive low diversity
  • At low rates of disturbance, K-selected species
    would outcompete others low diversity

27
  • Fall of a tree creates a light gap in the
    rainforest canopy
  • Direct sunlight is able to reach the rainforest
    floor
  • Light gap is rapidly colonized by r-selected
    species which are well adapted for rapid growth
  • While these pioneering species grow rapidly, they
    are overtaken by hardier K-selected species which
    fill in the gap in the canopy
  • This happens often but in any one area with
    intermediate frequency

28
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29
Fire Ecology Yellowstone fires of 1988 Fire has
been used to manage marshes and forests
30
Community DevelopmentEcological succession
  • A process of change that results from disturbance
  • Transition in species composition over ecological
    time
  • Primary succession succession on a newly
    exposed site that was not previously occupied by
    soil and vegetation
  • Secondary succession succession on a site that
    has already supported life but that has undergone
    a disturbance, such as a fire, tornado,
    hurricane, or flood

31
Succession
  • Primary succession
  • Occurs on essentially lifeless terrain
  • Volcanic eruptions
  • Retreat of glaciers
  • May take hundreds to thousands of years
  • The first group of organisms to appear
  • Autotrophic bacteria
  • Lichens and mosses (spores)
  • Grasses, ferns, shrubs, trees

32
  • Primary succession on Mount St. Helens

33
  • Glacier Bay used a specific example of
    facilitation as a mechanism of succession
  • Over the past 200 years, glaciers have retreated
    100 km
  • Succession has followed a distinct pattern of
    vegetation

34
Secondary Succession
  • Clements emphasized that succession had a
    distinct end point (climax community)
  • Each phase of succession called a sere or seral
    stage
  • Disturbance might set the community back to an
    earlier seral stage
  • It then proceeded toward climax
  • Each colonizing species made the environment a
    little different
  • Facilitation colonizing species changed the
    environment so that it becomes more suitable for
    the next species

35
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36
  • Alternative hypotheses to facilitation
  • Inhibition early colonists may exclude
    subsequent colonists
  • What gets there first determines subsequent
    community structure
  • Primary method of succession in marine intertidal
    zone early successional species at a great
    advantage in maintaining possession of valuable
    space by removing the early colonist Ulva,
    Gigartina was able to colonize more quickly

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38
  • Tolerance any species can start the succession,
    but the eventual climax community is reached in a
    somewhat orderly fashion
  • Proposed as the middle ground between
    facilitation and inhibition hypotheses
  • Study showed that succession in plant communities
    is determined largely by species that already
    exist in the ground as buried seeds or old roots
  • Whichever species germinates first, or
    regenerates from roots, initiates the succession
    sequence

39
Summary of Succession
  • Key distinction between 3 models is in the manner
    succession proceeds
  • Facilitation species replacement facilitated by
    previous colonists
  • Inhibition species replacement is inhibited by
    previous colonists
  • Tolerance species replacement is unaffected by
    previous colonists
  • Other factors may also influence succession

40
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41
Secondary Succession
  • Existing community has been disturbed
  • Soil is intact
  • Old field succession
  • What factors determine the course of succession?
  • Disturbance colonizers organisms with
  • a high reproductive rate,
  • good at dispersal
  • weedy plant species
  • Inhibition by competition
  • Facilitation species pave the way for others

http//bioweb.wku.edu/faculty/Ameier/oldfield1.htm

42
Old Field Succession
70th-100th Pine to Hardwood transition
3rd-18th year Young Pine forest
1st year Horseweed Crabgrass pigweed
19th-30th year Mature pine Forest Understory of
Young hardwoods
100th year plus Climax Oak-hickory forest
2nd year Asters Crab grass
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