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Title: Chapter 53: Community Ecology


1
Chapter 53CommunityEcology
2
Community Ecology
  • A community consists of all of the organisms
    living within a certain geographical area
  • These organisms include conspecifics as well as
    members of other species
  • These organisms interact with each other both
    directly and indirectly
  • Numerous (pessimists might say "endless")
    parameters affect what species are present and in
    what abundance
  • "Simple generalizations can rarely explain why
    certain species commonly occur together in
    communities.
  • "The distributions of most populations in
    communities are probably affected to some extent
    by both abiotic gradients and interactions with
    other species."

3
Interspecific Interactions
A key distinction between intraspecific and
interspecific interactions is that the former but
not the latter share a gene pool
  Intraspecific interactions do not generally
lead to the extinction of a species in
interspecific interactions, losers can go extinct
4
Commensalism
The Knifes Edge!
For the host species to be truly not affected
by the commensal, either negatively or
positively, is probably somewhat rare
5
Interspecific Interactions
6
Mutualism
The ants feed on sugar produced by nectaries on
the tree and on protein-rich swellings (orange in
the photograph) at the tips of the leaflet. The
acacia benefits because the pugnacious ants,
which attack anything that touches the tree,
remove fungal spores and other debris and clip
vegetation that grows to close to the acacia. p.
1164, Campbell Reece (2005)
7
Mutualism
the fish is able to produce a special mucus
that causes the anemone not to release its
stings In return for the anemone's protection,
the fish brings scraps to it, and lures larger
fish into the anemone's tentacles.
http//mangrove.nus.edu.sg/pub/seashore/text/265.h
tm
8
Interspecific Interactions
One individual partly consuming another
(especially a plant)
One individual killing another
A symbiont replicating at the expense of a hosts
health
9
/ - more than just predation
10
Defense against / or /
  • Secondary compounds (plants)
  • Nutritional deficiencies (plants)
  • Mechanical defenses (plants)
  • Production of poisons (animals)
  • Mechanical defenses (animals)
  • Running away hiding (animals)
  • Fighting back (mostly animals)
  • Cryptic coloration (mostly animals)
  • Batesian mimicry (animals)
  • Müllerian mimicry (animals)
  • Immune systems (animals)

11
Plant Defenses
It is important to keep in mind that herbivores
can be big (cows) as well as small (insects,
fungi, bacteria), so more than one defense is
typically necessary to defeat all possible
predators
Plants tend to be eaten in pieces rather than as
a whole organism, so anything a plant can do to
spare part of the plant from being eaten can also
be advantageous
Typically a plant will not manage to achieve
complete avoidance of predation, but instead will
limit their own predation to those organisms that
possess appropriate morphological or biochemical
adaptations
12
Secondary Compounds
  • Secondary compounds are chemicals that plants
    produce that are distinct from the primary
    metabolism that to some extent common to all
    plants
  • One role of secondary compounds are as defenses
    against predation, e.g., toxins
  • What is toxic to one herbivore may be useful to
    another particularly humans take great advantage
    of plant secondary chemicals using them as drugs
    (both recreational and medicinal), spices, etc.
  • Some animals (e.g., monarch butterflies) can
    actually incorporate these toxins into themselves
    to make themselves unpalatable to some of their
    own predators

13
Nutrient Deficiencies (plants)
Such nutritional deficiencies force predators to
diversify what plants they consume, thus
preventing herbivores from getting too good
(specialized) at exploiting a particular plant
species
Plants tend to lack certain nutrients (e.g.,
essential amino acids)
14
Mechanical Defenses
  • Anything a plant can do to keep a herbivore from
    reaching, biting, or deriving benefit from it
    once a piece that has been removed can serve to
    protect the plant from being consumed
  • Thorns, for example, prevent larger things from
    comfortably eating a plant, while hairs and other
    small appendages can keep small things from
    reaching the plant
  • Plants can interfere with chewing by,
    essentially, being less than succulent, e.g.,.
    the shell of a nut or silica deposited in the
    leaves of grass

15
Production of Poisons
16
Mechanical Defenses (animals)
17
Running Away and Hiding
18
Fighting Back
19
Cryptic Coloration
20
More Cryptic Coloration
21
Coevolution
  • Coevolution represents the evolutionary
    modification of organisms in response to other
    organisms, particularly when two organisms are
    mutually modified in response to modifications
    displayed by the other.
  • "Despite the problems in assessing cause and
    effect in the evolution of complex ecological
    relationships, biologists agree that the
    adaptation of organisms to other species in a
    community is a fundamental characteristic of
    life. Put another way, interactions of species in
    ecological time often translate into adaptations
    over evolutionary time.
  • Strictly, coevolutionary relations may be limited
    to interactions between two species rather than
    modifications that affect a suite of species for
    example, an ability to run faster in order to
    escape predators is not quite the same thing as
    an ability to run faster in order to escape one
    predator species (which, if it wants a meal,
    would then be exposed to selection to run even
    faster).
  • This narrowing limits the applicability of the
    idea of coevolution since it creates a criteria
    that is stricter then simply more effectively
    interacting with other species in terms of
    survival and reproduction.

22
Parasite-Host Coevolution
23
Aposematic (warning) Coloration
Aposematic coloration is how organisms advertise
unpalatableness, at least visually (humans, or
course, display a distinct bias in terms of
visual input)
24
Batesian Mimicry
Batesian mimicry is the tendency of palatable and
otherwise succulent prey species to pretend to be
unpalatable by looking like unpalatable species
25
Müllerian Mimicry
Müllerian mimicry is when two unpallatable
species both display the same aposematic
coloration
This increases the rate at which predators learn
to recognize unpallatableness
26
Interspecific Interactions
27
Interspecific Competition
  • Interspecific competition represents a lose-lose
    interaction (-/-), that is, both species are less
    able to convert resources into progeny because
    the other species is laying claim to the same
    resources
  • Note that this is an unstable situation that will
    tend to select for either better means of
    acquiring the contested resources, or a switching
    to a different resource
  • Additionally, note that while a competing species
    may be more effective in exploiting any given
    resource, conspecifics will always be competing
    with any given individual for a larger variety of
    resources than will interspecifics
  • Thus, growth of a given species may be limited by
    both conspecifics (intraspecific
    competition/density-dependent factors) and
    interspecific competition (a density-independent
    factor)

28
Defense against /
  • Interference Competition
  • Fighting back
  • Running away
  • Avoidance
  • Losing
  • Exploitative Competition
  • Competitive exclusion
  • Resource partitioning
  • Character displacement
  • Fundamental vs. Realized Niche

29
Competitive Exclusion
"Two species with similar requirements (cannot)
coexist in the same community one species would
inevitably harvest resources and reproduce more
efficiently, driving the other to local
extinction. Even a slight reproductive advantage
would eventually lead to the elimination of the
inferior competitor."
30
Resource Partitioning
Extinction of one of two sympatric populations
competing over resources is not the only possible
outcome of interspecific competition
An alternative outcome is the evolution of a
divergence of resource needs, called resource
partitioning
31
Character Displacement
"The tendency for characters to be more divergent
in sympatric populations of two species than
allopatric population of the same two species is
called character displacement."
That is, characters diverge presumably in
response to interspecific competition, and thus
do not diverge in populations not subject to the
same interspecific competition
32
Ecological Niche
  • What is being fought over in interspecific
    competition is various aspects of the ecological
    niche
  • A niche is the sum total of what an organism does
    in its environment, including all of the
    resources consumed
  • All of the resources a population could exploit
    under ideal conditions, where there exists no
    interspecific competition, is termed the
    fundamental niche of an organism
  • The fundamental niche basically represents as
    good as things can get for an organism
  • A population able to exploit its fundamental
    niche would be able to achieve its maximal
    population size
  • A realized niche is those resources a population
    can exploit in a real environment, particularly
    one in which interspecific competition occurs

33
Fundamental Realized Niches
34
Interspecific Interactions
35
Trophic Structure
  • Trophic structures are the feeding relationships
    within communities and therefore within
    ecosystems, that is, who's eating whom
  • Trophic levels refer to how far removed from the
    original source of energy an organism is within a
    trophic structure
  • The first trophic level is made up of the primary
    producers, the organisms that obtain from
    inorganic sources the energy that powers
    ecosystems
  • Primary producers typically are photosynthetic
    organisms more generally, primary producers are
    autotrophs (i.e., they fix CO2)
  • Consumers are the heterotrophs, i.e., organisms
    that obtain their carbon from other organisms
  • The typical consumer is a chemoheterotroph that
    consumes other organisms or parts of other
    organisms to obtain their carbon and energy

36
Food Chains
Note that it is the words in this figure rather
than the images that are important
All other consumers are carnivores, detrivores,
or decomposers
Primary consumers are herbivores
37
Food Chains and Webs
  • A simplification of the trophic structure of an
    ecosystem is the food chain
  • Food chains refer to the passage of nutrients and
    energy from a primary producer to a primary
    consumer to a secondary consumer, and so on
  • Food chains are usually a simplistic
    representation because they assume that a given
    organism consumes only one kind species and that
    the predators of any given consumer also consume
    only one kind of species
  • Far more realistic is the concept of food webs
  • Food webs are like food chains but more
    realistic, i.e., allowing for species to consume
    more than one other kind of species and allowing
    individual species to consume at more than one
    trophic level

38
Aquatic Food Web
39
Marsh Food Web
Most food chains have no more than about five
trophic levels
Reasons for this limitation include energy losses
while moving up trophic levels and that higher
trophic levels are more prone to extinction
40
Trophic Levels vs. Energy Available
41
Field Food Web
42
Soil Food Web
43
Species Richness vs. Abundance
Same species richness, different species abundance
44
Predation Species Diversity
  • A way that two directly competing species can
    achieve coexistence results from both species
    sharing a predator
  • Both competing species (i.e., the prey) can
    coexist especially if the weaker competing
    species happens to be better at escaping
    predation
  • Additionally, optimal foraging can result in prey
    caught and consumed as a function of their
    population densities such that predation
    maintains prey diversity by frequency-dependent
    effects in the same manner that
    frequency-dependent selection can maintain a
    balanced polymorphism
  • One can describe a predator whose presence has a
    profound impact on the species diversity of a
    given community as a keystone species

45
Keystone Species
Predator controls species abundance top-down
control
46
Keystone Species
47
Bottom-Up Control
Resources (e.g., food, or here rain) control
species abundance bottom-up control
48
More Bottom-Up Control
Evotranspiration is a function of both water
availability and temperature
49
Foundation Species
Foundation species facilitate ecosystems by their
presence
50
Ecosystem Engineers
Ecosystem engineers serve as foundation species
as a consequence of their actions
51
Interspecific Interactions
52
Ecological Succession
  • Limiting the carrying capacity for many organisms
    is that the presence of these organisms
    essentially spoils the environment for their
    continued presence
  • Such organisms typically are good at finding
    environments they can exploit, exploiting those
    environments, then giving way to organisms which
    are better at hanging on in those environments
  • The exploitation of an environment by one
    population, followed by the exploitation by a
    second (third, etc.) population is termed
    ecological succession
  • Ecological succession continues in a habitat
    until species whose young are good at maturing
    within the same environment (as well as good at
    excluding other species) comes to dominate the
    environment, or until catastrophic change
    essentially wipes the slate clean, making an
    environment once again exploitable to the
    r-selected populations

53
Ecological Succession
54
Primary Succession
When the environment being exploited is
essentially lifelesslacking in both living
organisms and in their remainsthen the first
round of exploitation is termed primary
succession
55
Primary Succession
Primary succession occurs, for example, following
volcanic or glacial destruction of an environment
The first organisms that exploit an otherwise
lifeless terrain are termed primary successors
Primary succession is a fairly rare occurrence
especially relative to the much-more familiar
secondary succession that we observe in disturbed
habitats all around us
56
Secondary Succession
Secondary succession is succession that follows
primary succession, i.e., of an environment that
already contains life (or, at least, soil)
57
Dryas
  "Because resource availability changes over the
course of succession, different species compete
better at different stages. Early stages are
typically characterized by r-selected species
that are good colonizers because of their high
fecundity and excellent dispersal mechanisms.
Many of these may be described as fugitive or
weedy species that do not compete well in
established communities, but maintain themselves
by constantly colonizing newly disturbed areas
before better competitors can become established
in the same places."
58
Secondary Succession
  • Alders Cottonwoods are better competitors when
    N concentrations are lower

59
Big Sitka Spruces
60
Ecological Succession
  • The community that exists following ecological
    succession is termed the climax community
  • A climax community is made up of organisms that
    are good at reproducing in the face of
    interspecific competition
  • "At the climax stage, environmental conditions
    are such that the same species can continue to
    maintain themselves. For example, the
    maple-beech forest that is the climax stage of
    old-field succession in much of Ohio maintains
    the moist, shaded environment that allows
    offspring of these species to grow, while
    inhibiting most of the species typical of earlier
    stages of succession."
  • Climax communities will remain in place until
    either the climate changes, a better competitor
    arrives, or the community is catastrophically
    disrupted, e.g., by fire or, more recently, by
    extensive logging

61
Canadian Hemlock
Intermediate levels of disturbance, e.g.,
low-level fire or large storms, that disrupt
climax communities can result in greater levels
of community species diversity
62
Secondary Succession
63
Island Biogeography
  • In order for an ecosystem to go through
    succession, the organisms in each wave of
    succession must be available in the local
    environment
  • The farther an ecosystem is from a source of
    these organisms, the less likely these organisms
    will be present and therefore that succession
    will occur
  • The smaller an ecosystem is, the less likely that
    species will find their way to there and the more
    likely that species present will go extinct (due
    to smaller size and due to resultantly smaller
    populations, respectively)
  • This can be seen most obviously on islands
  • the farther an island is from a source of
    organisms, the less likely the given organisms
    will find their way to the island
  • and the smaller an ecosystem is, the less able
    it is to hold on to the species that it has

64
Island Biogeography
Application of these ideas to our environment is
somewhat profound because they tell us that we
can't go on destroying ecosystems forever without
risking their very existence
65
Island Species Richness
If we convert every last forest into farmland,
housing tract, or parking lot, the remnants of
ecosystems will be so small that they will be
unable to sustain what species they start with
66
Island Species Richness
and ecosystems will be so far apart that they
will be unable to reacquire species from similar
ecosystems
67
Island Species Richness
In this and the previous 2 graphs, just
understand the trends rather than memorizing
numbes or scales
68
Ecological Footprint
The lesson from Island Biogeography is that
ultimately we humans are genetic bottlenecking of
the entire world, and if our goal is to survive
past this environmental disaster of our own
making, then the big losers will most definitely
be ourselves
Or, to paraphrase George Carlin, If we're so
smart, why are we peeing in our water bowl?
69
The End
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