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Ecosystems Ecology Section V

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Herbivores (zooplankton) -1.5. Producers (phytoplankton) - 0.4. Food Web Patterns ... They are critical to tropical forest fruit-eating guilds. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ecosystems Ecology Section V


1
Ecosystems Ecology Section V
  • Three links in this food chain.
  • How much energy is passed from link to link?
  • How many links are there?
  • Ecosystem ecology focuses on the flow of energy
    nutrients through food chains.

2
Trophic Structure
  • Chapter 20

3
What Is an Ecosystem?
  • A. G. Tansley (1935) coined the term ecosystem.
  • Includes the biotic community of organisms and
    the abiotic environment around the community.

4
What Is an Ecosystem?
  • Ecosystem ecology is concerned with the movement
    of energy and materials through communities.
  • Can be applied at any scale.

5
What Is an Ecosystem?
  • Most ecosystems do not have clearly defined
    boundaries.

6
What Is an Ecosystem?
  • Advantage of ecosystem ecology is the common
    currency of energy or nutrients, which allows
    communities and populations to be compared
    between and within trophic levels.

7
Food Web Complexity
  • Few ecosystems can be characterized by a single
    unbranched food chain.
  • More correct to draw relationships as an
    elaborate interwoven food web.

8
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9
Food Web Complexity
  • Measures of food web complexity
  • Chain length denotes the average number of
    links between trophic levels.
  • Connectance actual number of links / potential
    number of links.
  • Linkage density number of links per species.

10
Food Web Patterns
  • Connectance remains constant as the number of
    species in the food web increases.

11
Food Web Patterns
  • Imagine a bird that feeds on insects in two
    different communities.
  • Community A has twice the number of species as
    community B.
  • It seems reasonable that the bird will eat twice
    the number of different insect species in
    community A.
  • If this applies to all species, connectance would
    remain the same.

12
Food Web Patterns
  • Mean chain length increases as the number of
    species in the web increases.

13
Food Web Patterns
  • Top predators tend to be rather large and
    sparsely distributed, whereas herbivores are
    smaller and more common (termed pyramid of
    numbers).

14
Food Web Patterns
  • Charles Elton (1927) described pattern.
  • Small pond

Fish - one hundred
Beetles - one thousand
Daphnia - hundreds of thousands
Protozoa - millions
15
Food Web Patterns
  • Exceptions to the pyramid of numbers
  • Oak tree (one producer) supports thousands of
    herbivorous beetles, caterpillars, and other
    primary consumers, which support tens of
    thousands of predators and parasites.

Parasites and predators - tens of thousands
Insect herbivores - thousands
Oak tree - one
16
Food Web Patterns
  • Reconcile this exception
  • Weigh the organisms in each trophic level.
  • Oak tree weighs 30,000 kg, all herbivores. in
    tree weigh 5 kg, and the predators sum about 100
    g.

Parasites and predators - 100g
Herbivores - 5 kg
Oak tree - 30 tonnes
17
Food Web Patterns
  • Inverted pyramids can still occur even when
    biomass is used.
  • Biomass of phytoplankton supports a higher
    biomass of zooplankton in the English Channel.

Primary carnivores (pelagic fish) - 1.8
Herbivores (zooplankton) -1.5
Producers (phytoplankton) - 0.4
18
Food Web Patterns
  • May be because the production rate of
    phytoplankton is much higher than zooplankton,
    and the small standing crop of phytoplankton
    processes large amounts of energy.

19
Food Web Patterns
  • The most realistic pyramid is the energy pyramid,
    which is never inverted.

Primary carnivores - 0.0016
Herbivores - 0.15
Producers - 0.4
20
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • Food web analysis has helped us understand
    ecosystems, but
  • Some problems with data may invalidate the
    observed patterns in food webs.
  • Predation on "minor" species is frequently
    omitted. Food webs are far more complex than is
    reported.

21
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • Gary Polis (1991) conducted an intensive
    10-year study of the local desert ecosystem.
  • Found 174 species of plants, 138 vertebrate
    species, 55 species of spiders and scorpions, an
    estimated 2,000-3,000 species of insects, and an
    unknown number of microorganisms and nematodes.

22
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • Compared to literature, chains were longer,
    omnivory was common, and linkage density was much
    greater.

23
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • Data on quantities of food consumed indicating
    the thickness of connecting links, are usually
    absent from published work.

24
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • Robert Paine (1992) first example in which
    interaction strengths were calculated in the food
    web.
  • Most connections were found to be weak, so the
    web was essentially very simple.

25
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • Blake and Wallace (1997) showed how misleading
    a normal food web for a riverine system in
    Alabama is, because it implied the equivalence of
    all food resources.

26
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • Great variation in the strengths of linkages.
  • Perhaps we should give weight to strong linkages
    when calculating connectance.

27
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • In food web theory, species are often aggregated
    into "trophic species.
  • Ex. various types of insects are often lumped
    together.
  • This grouping disguises important biology.

28
Problems With Food Web Patterns
  • Data on the importance of chemical nutrients are
    sparse.
  • Hard to define web boundaries.
  • Food web links may obscure positive effects of
    higher trophic levels on their food production.
  • Ex. Pollinators have a net positive effect on
    their hosts.

29
Guilds
  • Guilds a group of functionally similar organisms
    within a trophic level.

30
Guilds
  • Coined by Dick Root (1967)
  • In his studies of birds, he used the term guild
    to describe a group of species that fed on the
    same resources and in the same way.

31
Guilds
  • Ex. In an insect community feeding on plants, we
    may have leaf chewing guild, sap sucking guild,
    leaf miners, stem borers, stem gallers, root
    feeders, and flower feeders.

32
  • The stem boring guild of a salt marsh grass.

33
Guilds
  • Interest in Guilds
  • Guilds represent arenas of the most intense
    competition.
  • Guilds represent the basic building block of
    communities.

34
Guilds
  • Main problem with guild theory
  • How much overlap in diet does there have to be
    for species to belong to the same guild?
  • Answer may depend on which resources one selects
    for analysis.
  • Ex. the fox is an insectivore if you base diet
    overlap on species richness, but not if you base
    it on biomass of prey.

35
Guilds
  • Patterns found in guild analysis
  • Density compensation within guilds could maintain
    overall guild abundance at or near carrying
    capacity.
  • Fortunes of different species within the guild
    vary individually in response to factors other
    than resource variability.

36
Guilds
  • Evidence John Lawton and colleagues (1984,
    1993)
  • Herbivore community of bracken fern in England,
    Brazil, South Africa, New Mexico, and United
    States, Borneo, and Hawaii.
  • Insects were arranged into four guilds (chewers,
    suckers, miners, and gallers) and further divided
    based on where they fed on the plant (main stem,
    leaves, and leaf veins).

37
Sap Sucker
Leaf Chewer
Leaf Miner
Stem Galler
38
  • Results failed to support the guild theory.

39
Guilds
  • Evidence Ashbourne and Putnam (1987)
  • Herbivores feeding on red oak in Canada
    England.
  • Insects arranged into four basic guilds (chewers,
    suckers, miners, and gallers), and included three
    more (species that folded one leaf in half and
    fed inside species that tied two leaves together
    and fed inside and species that rolled leaves up
    and fed inside).

40
  • Their result was opposite to Lawton. Striking
    similarities were seen between the guild
    composition of the two regions.

41
Keystone Species
  • Keystone species a species that has an effect on
    an ecosystem out of proportion to its abundance
    or biomass.
  • Ex. the beaver can completely alter an ecosystem
    by building dams.

42
Keystone Species
  • Difference between a keystone species and a
    dominant species
  • A dominant species has a large effect in a
    community because it is very common.
  • Ex. Spartina is a dominant species in a salt
    marsh due to its large biomass and role in energy
    flow.

43
Keystone Species
  • Keystone enemies or predators
  • Ex. Pisaster starfish and predatory whelks in the
    rocky intertidal zone.
  • Removal of either results in the community being
    dominated by mussels.

44
Keystone Species
  • Keystone prey
  • Ex. Palm nuts, figs and nectar.
  • They are critical to tropical forest fruit-eating
    guilds.
  • Without the fruit trees, wholesale extinction of
    frugivores would occur.

45
Keystone Species
  • Keystone habitat modifiers
  • Ex. Gopher tortoises.
  • Burrows provide homes for an array of mice,
    possums, frogs, snakes, and insects.
  • Without the burrows, many of these creatures
    would be unable to survive.

46
Keystone Species
  • Both gopher tortoises and beavers are considered
    ecosystem engineers, because they modify the
    habitat and cause ecological changes.

47
Summary
  • Many food webs can be compared by simple
    properties such as connectance and linkage
    density.

48
Summary
  • The analysis of food webs has revealed some
    common patterns.
  • Two are that, as the number of species in a food
    web increases, chain length tends to increase,
    but connectance remains constant. Another is
    that there is a pyramid of numbers, with fewer
    species on higher trophic levels than on lower
    trophic levels.

49
Summary
  • Because food webs are usually imperfectly known,
    the generalizations that have resulted from them
    may be incorrect.
  • The inadvertent omission of minor or mobile
    species, lack of knowledge about the strength,
    importance, or beneficial effects of connecting
    links between species, and the taxonomic lumping
    of species into groups or guilds can all obscure
    true food web patterns.

50
Summary
  • Guilds are a valuable analytical tool because
    they focus attention on groups of species most
    likely to be competing for resources.

51
Summary
  • Keystone species have a large influence on
    ecosystems out of proportion to their abundance.
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