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Introduction to autecology (ecology of individual) Variation within species; subspecies (examples) ... Autecology = Physiological ecology. Ecology of individual ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Outline


1
Outline
  • Review of scale and hierarchy in biological
    organization (handout from Monday)
  • Introduction to autecology (ecology of
    individual)
  • Variation within species subspecies (examples)
  • Tolerance and limiting factors
  • Niche
  • Introduction to physiological processes and
    abiotic factors

2
Reading
  • Related to this lecture
  • Kolb and Sperry 1999. Ecology 80(7)2373-2384
  • Shahba et al. 2003. Crop Science 432142-2147
  • Text Chapter 3
  • Related to next lectures
  • Monday Text Chapters 18 19
  • Wednesday Text Chapters 14 15
  • Lab discussion (Tues Feb 3)
  • Bestelmeyer et al. 2003. Ecological Applications
    13(6)1750-1761.
  • Hull et al. 2002. Conservation Ecology 6(2)12.
  • If interested there are two responses to Hull et
    al. in Conservation Ecology 7(1).

3
Organization
  • Organisms influenced by 4 types of relationships
    (see handout from Monday)
  • Physiological (grp 1 on diagram)
  • Increasing complexity, emergent properties
  • Phylogenetic (grp 2 on diagram)
  • Taxonomic/evolutionary
  • Partitioning of genetic descent
  • Coevolutionary(grp 3 on diagram)
  • Deme, Population, Community (definitions)
  • Organisms affect each others reproductive
    success
  • Traditional synecology
  • Matter-energy (grp 4 on diagram)
  • Ecosystems ecology

4
Hierarchy and scale
  • With increasing spatial scale, temporal scale of
    processes also tends to increase
  • Ecologists study across spatial and temporal
    scales
  • Observation scale may affect both our
    interpretation of ecosystem interactions and our
    management decisions

5
Organizational level individual or species
  • Autecology Physiological ecology. Ecology of
    individual organisms
  • Environment rainfall, temperature, light,
    biotic interactions
  • Resource acquisition nutrient uptake,
    photosynthesis
  • Allocation of resources to growth and
    reproduction
  • Effects of environmental changes, stresses

6
Variation in species (ch. 3)
  • Substantial variation within taxonomic species
    heritable, adaptive characters (Turesson)
  • e.g. hawkweed in Sweden (ecotypes)
  • Three habitats (woodland, field, dune)
  • Differ in traits habit, leave shape, dormancy
  • Traits maintained when grown in greenhouse
  • All groups interfertile
  • Similar experiment in California (Clausen et al
    1940).

7
Variation in species
  • common gardens at Stanford, Mather
    (Mid-elevation Sierra Nevada), and Timberline
    (3000m elevation)
  • Grew 60 different species collected from a range
    of sites from coast to eastern slopes
  • Potentilla glandulosa ecotypes (subspecies)
    differ in growth form, frost and disease and
    survival in different gardens (see textbook Ch. 3)

8
Variation in species
  • Other experiments show two ecotypic extremes with
    gradient of variation between them (ecocline)
  • Current usage of ecotype population, not
    group of populations. Populations have genetic
    and phenotypic differences, but act as
    individuals.

9
Subspecies or different species?
  • What is a subspecies?
  • Regional variants in a species morphological
    differentiation (not great enough to be
    considered separate species) occurs in relation
    to geographic, ecological or temporal separation
    from other subspecies.

10
Subspecies or different species?
  • Pinus contorta three subspecies. Contorta not
    fire adapted (shore pine). Latifolia (rocky
    mountain lodgepole) fire dependent dominance in
    landscape and proportion serotinous cones related
    to fire frequency. Murrayana (sierra lodgepole)
    fire sensitive, but early after-fire coloniser.
    Not serotinous.
  • Pinus ponderosa and Pinus jeffreyi. Differ in
    resin chemistry and habitat (elevation). Are
    sympatric at mid-elevation, and hybridize.
    Different enough to be species.
  • Ords kangaroo rat in Alberta hibernate. Dont
    hibernate anywhere else. Is this peripheral
    population worth saving as a distinct taxon?

11
Physiological Differences
  • Kolb Sperry (1999) drought adaptation between
    subspecies of sagebrush.
  • Three subspecies wyomingensis (low elevation,
    arid)
  • tridentata (mid elevation,
    less arid)
  • vaseyana (high elevation, mesic)
  • Subspecies differ in stature, inflorescence, and
    ploidy. Differences maintained in common garden
    (genetic).
  • Differ in physiology pressures at which xylem
    cavitates and leaves wilt differ among
    subspecies. Differences maintained in common
    garden.

12
Variation in species
  • Additional examples
  • Saltgrass frost tolerance Crop Science
    432142-2147
  • Norway Spruce altitudinal ecotypes Functional
    Ecology 12573-590
  • Sagebrush subspecies Ecology 80(7)2373-2384

13
  • Liebigs Law of the Minimum crop yield
    dependent on nutrient most limited in amount.
  • More general growth/distribution of species
    depends on critical environmental factor.
  • Limitations upper limit to tolerance
  • factors interact
  • Shelfords Law of Tolerance minimum, maximum,
    and optimum values for all environmental factors

14
Niche concept law of tolerance
  • Expanded law of tolerance (Good, 1953)
  • Plant species exist and reproduce in a definite
    range of conditions (climatic, edaphic, biotic)

15
Niche concept law of tolerance
  • Expanded law of tolerance (Good, 1953)
  • Plant species exist and reproduce in a definite
    range of conditions (climatic, edaphic, biotic)
  • Tolerance ranges related to physiology

16
Niche concept law of tolerance
  • Expanded law of tolerance (Good, 1953)
  • Plant species exist and reproduce in a definite
    range of conditions (climatic, edaphic, biotic)
  • Tolerance ranges related to physiology
  • Habitat is sum total of tolerance for all
    environmental factors (fundamental niche
    Hutchinson 1957)

17
Niche concept law of tolerance
  • Expanded law of tolerance (Good, 1953)
  • Plant species exist and reproduce in a definite
    range of conditions (climatic, edaphic, biotic)
  • Tolerance ranges related to physiology
  • Habitat is sum total of tolerance for all
    environmental factors (fundamental niche
    Hutchinson 1957)
  • May shift depending on levels of other factors
    (e.g. N and water)

18
Niche concept law of tolerance
  • Expanded law of tolerance (Good, 1953)
  • Plant species exist and reproduce in a definite
    range of conditions (climatic, edaphic, biotic)
  • Tolerance ranges related to physiology
  • Habitat is sum total of tolerance for all
    environmental factors (fundamental niche
    Hutchinson 1957)
  • May shift depending on levels of other factors
    (e.g. N and water)
  • May vary as a function of life stage (e.g.
    seedlings narrow range, adults broad)

19
Niche concept law of tolerance
  • Expanded law of tolerance (Good, 1953)
  • Plant species exist and reproduce in a definite
    range of conditions (climatic, edaphic, biotic)
  • Tolerance ranges related to physiology
  • Habitat is sum total of tolerance for all
    environmental factors (fundamental niche
    Hutchinson 1957)
  • May shift depending on levels of other factors
    (e.g. N and water)
  • May vary as a function of life stage (e.g.
    seedlings narrow range, adults broad)
  • Natural distribution not always equal to optimum
    (biotic interactions affect realized niche)
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