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Biological Communities and Species Interaction

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Title: Biological Communities and Species Interaction


1
Biological Communities and Species Interaction
2
Important Concepts
  • Critical Environmental Factors
  • Adaptation
  • Natural Selection
  • Speciation
  • Ecological Niche
  • Population Dynamics
  • Community Properties
  • Succession
  • Introduced Species

3
Types of Species Interactions
  • Competition
  • Predation Trophic levels
  • Mutualism
  • Community Structure
  • Succession

4
Critical Environmental Factors
  • Single factor in shortest supply relative to
    demand is the critical determinant in species
    distribution.
  • Each environmental factor has both minimum and
    maximum levels, tolerance limits, beyond which a
    particular species cannot survive.
  • No humans permanently above 5 km

5
Tolerance Limits
6
Limits of Range
  • Physical Barriers
  • Oceans (humans, cattle egrets, marsupials)
  • Mountains (house finch)
  • Ice (humans in the Americas)
  • Climatic
  • Altitude
  • Food
  • Water
  • Competitors

7
Expanding Human Range
8
Critical Environmental Factors
  • For many species, the interaction of several
    factors, rather than a single limiting factor,
    determines biogeographical distribution.
  • Altitude oxygen, temperature, food
  • May be a specific critical factor that mostly
    determines abundance and distribution.
  • Species requirements and tolerances can also be
    used as useful indicators.
  • Environmental indicators

9
Adaptation
  • Adaptation is used in two ways
  • Individual (moving from Alabama to Wisconsin)
  • Population (evolution)

10
Natural Selection
  • Natural Selection - Members of a population best
    suited for a particular set of environmental
    conditions survive and produce offspring more
    successfully than their competitors.
  • Acts on pre-existing genetic diversity.
  • Limited resources place selective pressures on a
    population.

11
Speciation
  • Given enough geographical isolation or selective
    pressure, members of a population become so
    different from their ancestors that they may be
    considered an entirely new species.
  • Alternatively, isolation of population subsets,
    preventing genetic exchange, can result in
    branching off of new species that coexist with
    the parental line.

12
Divergent vs. Convergent Evolution
  • Divergent Evolution - Mutations and different
    selective pressures cause populations to evolve
    along dissimilar paths.
  • Convergent Evolution - Unrelated organisms evolve
    separately to cope with environmental conditions
    in the same fashion.
  • Look alike - Act alike
  • Usually means some physical basis

13
Ecological Niche
  • Habitat - Place or set of environmental
    conditions where a particular organism lives.
  • Ecological Niche
  • Role a species plays in a biological community
    (e.g. large grassland herbivore)
  • Total set of environmental factors that
    determines a species distribution.
  • Generalists - Broad niche
  • Specialists - Narrow niche
  • When generalists and specialists collide,
    generalists usually win.

14
Competition
15
Law of Competitive Exclusion
  • No two species will occupy the same niche and
    compete for exactly the same resources for an
    extended period of time.
  • One will either migrate, become extinct, or
    partition the resource and utilize a sub-set of
    the same resource.
  • Given resource can only be partitioned a finite
    number of times.

16
Resource Partitioning
17
Predation
  • Feeds directly upon another living organism,
    whether or not it kills the prey in doing so.
  • Mosquitoes prey on humans
  • Prey most successfully on slowest, weakest, least
    fit members of target population.
  • Reduce competition, population overgrowth, and
    stimulate natural selection.
  • Co-evolution (arms race)

18
Co-Evolution and Disease
  • If a disease kills too quickly, it cant spread
  • Disease can moderate while host becomes more
    resistant (measles)
  • Disease can be lethal but messy (cholera, ebola)
  • Disease can be lethal but slow-acting (AIDS)

19
Keystone Species
  • Keystone Species - A species or group of species
    whose impact on its community or ecosystem is
    much larger and more influential than would be
    expected from mere abundance.
  • Large predators
  • Critical food organisms (bamboo and pandas)
  • Often, many species are intricately
    interconnected so that it is difficult to tell
    which is the essential component.

20
Competition
  • Interspecific - Competition between members of
    different species.
  • Intraspecific - Competition among members of the
    same species.
  • Often intense due to same space and nutritional
    requirements.
  • Territoriality - Organisms defend specific area
    containing resources, primarily against members
    of own species.
  • Resource Allocation and Spacing

21
Mutualism
  • Intimate living together of members of two or
    more species.
  • Commensalism - One member benefits while other is
    neither benefited nor harmed.
  • Cattle and Cattle Egrets
  • Symbiosis - Both members benefit.
  • Lichens (Fungus and cyanobacterium)
  • Parasitism - One member benefits at the expense
    of other.
  • Humans and Tapeworms

22
Commensalism Epiphytes
23
Symbiosis - Lichens
24
Defensive Mechanisms
  • Batesian Mimicry - Harmless species evolve
    characteristics that mimic unpalatable, dangerous
    or poisonous species
  • Viceroy and Monarch butterfly
  • Mullerian Mimicry - Two unpalatable species
    evolve to look alike
  • Bees and Wasps
  • Camouflage
  • Advertising and warning (coral snake)
  • Attracting prey, pollinators, mates, etc.

25
Abundance and Diversity
  • Abundance -Total number of organisms in a
    community.
  • Diversity - Number of different species,
    ecological niches, or genetic variation.
  • Abundance of a particular species often inversely
    related to community diversity.
  • As general rule, diversity decreases and
    abundance within species increases when moving
    from the equator to the poles.

26
Productivity
  • Primary Productivity - Rate of biomass
    production. Rate of solar energy conversion to
    chemical energy.
  • Net Primary Productivity - Energy left after
    metabolism
  • Highest in rain forest, estuaries, reefs
  • Decreases toward poles
  • Open oceans very low

27
Trophic Level (Food Chain)
  • A pond
  • Phytoplankton
  • Zooplankton
  • Small Fish
  • Larger Fish
  • Higher predators (birds, mammals)
  • Organisms are at same trophic level if they get
    their food from similar sources

28
Trophic Level (Food Chain)
  • A forest
  • Decaying organic matter
  • Insects
  • Small mammals and birds
  • Higher predators (owls, foxes, bears)
  • A Pasture or Grassland
  • Grass
  • Herbivore
  • Higher predators

29
Trophic Level (Food Chain)
  • At each level, some matter goes into biomass
  • Most goes into energy and metabolism
  • Hence each level needs about 10x as much energy,
    has fewer individuals
  • Bio-Accumulated chemicals get more abundant
    higher up the food chain

30
Food Requirements
  • Warm-blooded organisms require more food than
    cold-blooded
  • Predator/prey ratio higher for cold-blooded
  • Indication that some dinosaurs may have been
    warm-blooded
  • Large organisms eat less in proportion to their
    mass than small ones
  • Shrew 100 per day
  • Human 1 per day

31
Improbable Movie Biology
  • Things that eat people (Morlocks, The Time
    Machine)
  • Really huge carnivores (The Phantom Menace)
  • Huge carnivores in empty environments (Empire
    Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi)
  • Ultra-voracious carnivores (Jaws, Alien,
    Anaconda, Jurassic Park)

32
Complexity and Connectedness
  • Complexity - Number of species at each trophic
    level, and the number of trophic levels, in a
    community.
  • Diverse community may not be complex if all
    species are clustered in a few trophic levels.
  • Highly interconnected community may have many
    trophic levels, some of which can be
    compartmentalized.

33
Resilience and Stability
  • Constancy (Lack of fluctuation)
  • Inertia (Resistance to pertubation)
  • Renewal (Ability to repair damage)
  • MacArthur proposed complex, interconnected
    communities would be more stable and resilient in
    the face of disturbance.
  • Controversial

34
Edges and Boundaries
  • Edge Effects - Important aspect of community
    structure is the boundary between one habitat and
    others.
  • Ecotones - Boundaries between adjacent
    communities.
  • Sharp boundaries - Closed communities
  • Indistinct boundaries - Open communities

35
COMMUNITIES IN TRANSITION
  • Ecological Succession
  • Primary Succession - A community begins to
    develop on a site previously unoccupied by living
    organisms.
  • Pioneer Species
  • Secondary Succession - An existing community is
    disrupted and a new one subsequently develops at
    the site.

36
Terrestrial Primary Succession
37
Ecological Succession
  • Ecological Development - Process of environmental
    modification (facilitation) by organisms.
  • Climax Community - Community that develops and
    seemingly resists further change.
  • Equilibrium Communities (Disclimax Communities) -
    Never reach stable climax because they are
    adapted to periodic disruption.

38
Introduced Species
  • If introduced species prey upon or compete more
    successfully than native populations, the nature
    of the community may be altered.
  • Human history littered with examples of
    introducing exotic species to solve problems
    caused by previous introductions.
  • Mongoose and Rats in Caribbean

39
Summary
  • Critical Environmental Factors
  • Adaptation
  • Natural Selection
  • Speciation
  • Ecological Niche
  • Population Dynamics
  • Community Properties
  • Succession
  • Introduced Species
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