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Lecture 19: Community Dynamics (Equilibrium)

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Now, what factors determine the structure and dynamics of a community? ... zooplankton. Carnivores. small fish. Bigger carnivore. walleye eats small fish ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 19: Community Dynamics (Equilibrium)


1
Lecture 19 Community Dynamics (Equilibrium)
  • EEES 3050

2
Community Change
  • What determines distribution of species?
  • Dispersal, habitat, other species, abiotic
    factors
  • What determines the abundance of a population?
  • Extrinsic and intrinsic factors.
  • Now, what factors determine the structure and
    dynamics of a community?
  • Past 2 lectures Defined the structure of a
    community and succession.

3
Equilibrium vs. non-equilibrium
  • Equilibrium
  • Define communities in which species abundances
    remain constant or stable over time.
  • Nature is in a state of balance.
  • Non-equilibrium
  • Define communities in which species abundances
    do not remain constant. Abundances continually
    change.

4
Concept of Stability
  • Stability
  • Constant composition or abundance
  • Consistent pattern in fluctuations
  • Elements of stability
  • response
  • resistance
  • resilience
  • elasticity
  • amplitude
  • recovery

5
Response
Type of change.
6
Resilience Resistance
7
Resilience Resistance
  • speed of recovery vs minimize displacement

8
Recovery
  • Nature of rebound

9
Local vs. Global Stability
10
Equilibrium vs. non-equilibrium what controls
these types of system?
Equilibrium Non-equilibrim
Species interactions? Competition Species independence
What is limiting? Resources Abiotic factors
Density impacts? Dependent Independent
Stochastic impacts? Few Large
11
Equilibrium vs. non-equilibrium what controls
these types of system?
Equilibrium Non-equilibrim
Species interactions? Competition Species independence
What is limiting? Resources Abiotic factors
Density impacts? Dependent Independent
Stochastic impacts? Few Large
12
Equilibrium systems
  • Some history
  • Food chains and trophic levels
  • Brief intro to
  • Functional roles and guilds
  • Keystone species
  • Dominant species
  • Science Paper

13
Again some history
  • Clements-gtHutchinson -gt MacArthur
  • Development of Classical Competition theory
  • Population growth deterministic
  • Homogeneous environment
  • Competition is only significant biological
    interaction
  • Coexistence requires a stable equilibrium point.
  • Why is this theory limited?
  • Other biological interactions are important.
  • Such as predation
  • Space/location is important
  • Environments are rarely homogenous.

14
Equilibrium systems
  • Again
  • Rarely find such an ideal system.
  • Despite that, there are general patterns of
    relationships that exist.
  • See Science paper.

15
Food Chain
  • How does energy flow through an aquatic system?
  • Plants produce
  • phytoplankton
  • Herbivores eat
  • zooplankton
  • Carnivores
  • small fish
  • Bigger carnivore
  • walleye eats small fish
  • Even Bigger carnivore
  • I eat walleye!

16
Food chain? Or web?
17
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18
Food webs quickly become complex
  • Simplify with trophic levels
  • Producers
  • green plants
  • Primary consumers
  • herbivores
  • Secondary consumers
  • Carnivores, insect parasitoids
  • Tertiary consumers
  • Higher carnivores.

19
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20
Quantifying food webs
  • Connectance
  • actual interactions/potential interactions.
  • Food chain lengths
  • The number of lengths from top predator to
    basal species.

21
Quantifying food webs
  • Possible connections?
  • 7 x 7 49
  • Actual connections
  • 10
  • Connectance 10/49 0.2
  • Chain lengths
  • V1 4,3
  • V2 3

22
Example Food webs in 50 lakes
  • Observations
  • 50 lakes have different of species and
    different food webs.
  • The webs with more species have more links.
  • Hypothesis
  • Connectance will increase/decrease/remain
    constant across lakes.
  • Results

23
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24
Chain links are usually short, why?
  • Energetic hypothesis
  • Transfer of energy through consumption is not
    efficient.
  • 10
  • Stability hypothesis
  • Long chains would be weak.

25
Guilds
  • Guilds or functional groups
  • Define groups of species exploiting a common
    resource base in a similar fashion.
  • A subdivision of trophic levels
  • Examples?

26
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27
Importance of single species
  • Activities dominate community
  • Remember dunes
  • Succession was passed through specific species.
  • Keystone species
  • Effects much larger than would be predicted from
    their abundance.
  • Dominant species
  • Recognized by numerical abundance

28
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29
Impacts of Biodiversity Loss on Ocean Ecosystem
Service.
  • Science Nov. 3 2006
  • By B. Worm et al.

30
Introduction
  • Read Introduction
  • Topics from lectures?
  • Biodiversity, species richness, stability,
    experiments to natural systems, exploitation
    (harvesting)
  • Species richness may enhance ecosystem
    productivity and stability.
  • Hard to go from experiments to large-scale.
  • Marine systems are rapidly losing populations,
    species, functional groups.
  • What is role of biodiversity at the ecosystem
    level?

31
Experiments
  • Read Experiments Section
  • What did they do?
  • Meta analysis?
  • Examined published data.
  • Compared response of several different factors
    between systems with low and high diversity.

32
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34
Experiments
  • Results
  • Diversity enhanced production
  • Diversity enhanced stability.
  • Linked to resistance to disturbance
  • Linked to enhanced recovery.

35
Coastal Ecosystems
  • Read Coastal Ecosystems section
  • What did they do?
  • Examined 12 coastal and estuarine ecosystems.
  • Examined 30 to 80 species in each system.

36
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37
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38
Coastal Ecosystems
  • Results
  • Percent of collapsed taxa has increased since
    industrialization.
  • Loss of biodiversity is associated with loss of
    ecosystem services.
  • Suggests increasing risks for coastal
    inhabitants.
  • Experimental results supported at regional scale!

39
Large marine ecosystems
  • Read next section
  • What did they do?
  • Analyzed relationships between biodiversity and
    ecosystem services.
  • Used global catch database from U.N. FAO
  • Examine 64 Large marine ecosystems.
  • Definition a collapse occurs when catches drop
    below 10 of the recorded maximum.

40
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41
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42
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43
Large marine ecosystems
  • Results
  • Proportion of collapsed fisheries declined with
    increasing species richness.
  • Productivity increase with richness
  • Recovery increased with richness

44
Marine reserves and fishery closures
  • Read Marine Reserves section.
  • What did they do?
  • Have marine reserves and fishery closures
    reversed the decline of biodiversity at these
    locations?
  • Examined 44 protected reserves.

45
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46
Marine reserves and fishery closures
  • Results
  • Reserves and fishery closures have resulted in
  • Increased richness
  • Higher catch and catch per unit effort
  • Higher resistance
  • Lower variability
  • Higher

47
Conclusions
  • Read Conclusions
  • If things dont change
  • Collapse of all fisheries by 2048.
  • No dichotomy between conservation and economic
    development.
  • No evidence of redundancy (supports rivet)
  • Buffering provided by high species diversity
    generates insurance value.

48
Seminar
  • Tonight Lake Erie Center
  • "Thinking Sustainingly  What Would That Be
    Like?.
  • Charles V. Blatz, Department of Philosophy,
    University of Toledo.
  • Thursday November 8, 700 PM
  • Friday 330
  • Dennis Ojima Colorado State University
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