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Community Ecology

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Phellodendron (Amur cork tree) Japanese umbrella pine ... Alewife, smelt, ruffle, gobies. Minnows. Smelt. Sea lamprey. Lake trout. Pacific Salmon ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Ecology


1
Community Ecology
  • The Affect of Invasive Species on Communities

2
Vocabulary
  • Introduced
  • Alien
  • Exotic
  • Invasive Species
  • Native Species
  • Indigenous

3
Introduced Species
  • Transients founders and descendants are
    extirpated
  • Casual or infrequent population becomes
    naturalized (established) but not prolific or
    widespread
  • Invasive naturalized population persists and
    increases rapidly

4
Definitions of Invasive Species
  • Non-native (or alien) to the ecosystem under
    consideration
  • Whose introduction causes or is likely to cause
    economic or environmental harm or harm to human
    health.
  • Executive Order 13112

5
Defining Invasive Species
  • Not all introduced species become invasive
  • Native species can also become invasive if
    ecosystem dynamics are sufficiently altered

6
Invasive species are defined in ecological time
  • Equated to the successional processes 1-500 years
  • Botanical definition of native species are those
    that were present in North America in
    pre-colonial times (1-500 years ago)

7
  • Metasequoia (Dawn Redwood)
  • Katsura tree
  • China fir
  • Eucommia (hardy rubber trees)
  • Phellodendron (Amur cork tree)
  • Japanese umbrella pine

Many of the genera now considered exotic in
North America were once part of the normal flora
of the North American continent. According to the
Flora of North America, (they) were in North
America millions of years ago and then died out.
American Nurseryman September 1996
8
The author was objecting to new state regulations
that limit plantings to solely native species
The most dramatic result in such limitations
would be that hundredsif not a few
thousandnurseries would go out of business.
9
Studying Invasive Species
  • Predicting the course, character, and locations
    of future plant invasions
  • Early detection combined with a knowledge of its
    attributes and limitations maximizes control
    efforts
  • Scientists get to study contemporary
    evolutionary, ecological, and genetic processes

10
Invasive Species Biology
  • The Invader factors that promote invasiveness
  • The Habitat characteristics of invadible
    habitats
  • Invasion Dynamics how invasion takes place

11
What makes a species invasive?
  • Life History Traits the traits that affect an
    organisms schedule of reproduction, survival,
    and death
  • Life form (herbaceous, woody, larval, mature)
  • Dispersal (plants), Migration (animals)
  • Reproductive regime
  • Age at first reproduction
  • of offspring
  • Investment in parental care

12
Factors that Promote Invasiveness in Plants
  • Herbaceous
  • Reproduce sexually and asexually (clonal)
  • Rapid Reproduction growth from seedling to
    sexual maturity
  • Dispersed by wind or water
  • Tolerance to broad environmental conditions

Weeds
Clonal Trees
Grasses
Aquatic vegetation
13
Life History Traits of Invasive Species
  • Plants that invade disturbed habitats are called
    disturbance colonizers
  • (ex Agricultural land)
  • Reproduce sexually and asexually
  • Rapid growth from seedling to sexual maturity
  • Tolerance to changes in environmental conditions

14
Life History Traits of Invasive Species
  • Plant species that invade established communities
    are
  • Primarily aquatic or semi-aquatic
  • Grasses
  • Nitrogen fixers (Legumes)
  • Climbers (vines)
  • Clonal trees (asexual reproduction)

15
Eurasian Milfoil
  • Aquatic plant native to Europe, Asia, Northern
    Africa
  • Introduced in the 1940s
  • Sexual and clonal reproduction
  • Rapid time to maturity
  • Ecological consequences blocks light from
    reaching other aquatic species in the shallow
    waters

16
Life History Traits of Invasive Birds
  • Dispersal ability
  • Migratory vs. resident
  • Large clutch size
  • More than one clutch per season
  • Compete well with native species for resources
  • Repeated introductions
  • Association with humans

17
Invasive Fresh-water Fish
  • Tolerance to broad range of environmental
    conditions
  • Rapid dispersal
  • Aggressive behavior
  • Good competitors
  • Desirability to humans

Northern Snakehead
Grass Carp
European Carp
18
  • At all life stages will compete for food and
    habitat with native and sport fish
  • Adults are voracious predators, feed on other
    fish, crustaceans, frogs, reptiles, birds and
    small mammals
  • Can survive underneath ice, northern snakeheads
    are present in Siberia and would be able to
    survive in Northern NA climates
  • Can tolerate hypoxic conditions they are air
    breathers from late juvenile stage
  • The use of pesticides to control or eradicate
    populations would likely be ineffective because
    of their ability to air breath and move across
    land

Northern Snakehead
19
Invasive Mammals
  • We know much less
  • about mammals
  • Introduction to an ecological vacuum
  • Mammals have been very successful when introduced
    to islands
  • Nutria

20
Characteristics of Invadible Habitats
  • Habitats with lowered biotic resistance
  • Disturbed areas
  • Agricultural land
  • Overgrazed grassland
  • New developments
  • Urban areas

21
  • Communities of undefended prey
  • Native species lose defenses against threats that
    are not present
  • Islands (Hawaii)
  • Habitats without an invaders specialized natural
    enemies
  • Predators, pathogens, specialized herbivores
  • Habitats with established invaders that
    facilitate new invasions
  • Pigs and strawberry guava trees in Hawaii

22
Introduced early 19th century
  • Strawberry guava forms shade-casting thickets
    with dense mats of surface feeder roots that make
    it difficult for other species to coexist.
  • Characteristics that promote strawberry guava's
    success as an invader include
  • prolific fruiting and aggressive vegetative
    growth,
  • its tolerance of shade and heavy leaf litter, and
  • production of toxic chemicals in its leaves that
    prevent the growth of other plant species.

Introduced in 1778
23
The Process of Invasion
  • Introduction (can we control introductions?)
  • Initial colonization (is habitat available?)
  • Establishment (effect on community and ecosystem)
  • Secondary spread/dispersal (becoming invasive)

24
The Tens Rule
  • The proportion of exotics that cause serious harm
    is estimated by the
  • Tens Rule
  • 10 of introduced exotics will be successful in
    becoming established
  • 10 of established exotics will become invasive

25
The Process of Invasion
  • The process of
  • invasion mimics
  • logistic population
  • growth
  • Lag phase
  • Log phase
  • Stationary phase

26
Kochia scoparia
27
Whats Happening During the Lag Phase?
  • Natural selection produces new genotypes
  • Altering community relationships
  • Habitat alteration fire regime, hydrology

28
Ecological Consequences of Invasion
  • Generalized Supercompetition
  • Niche Usurpation
  • Generalized Superexploitation
  • Specialized Superexploitation
  • Mutualisms
  • Habitat modification

changes the food web
29
Generalized Supercompetition
  • Changes how organisms compete for resources,
    completely displacing native species in the
    process
  • Alters one layer of the food web
  • Supercompetition leads to ecological degradation
    and population loss
  • Ex Purple Loosestrife

Native of Europe
30
Natural Herbivores of Purple Loosestrife
  • Foliage and root eating insects
  • A root-mining weevil
  • Flower feeding weevil
  • Two leaf-eating beetles

31
Generalized Super Competition
  • The Competitive ability of purple
  • loosestrife is directly related to its life
    history
  • characteristics
  • Very high reproductive success
  • One plant can produce over 2 million seeds
    annually
  • Dispersed in water and mud
  • adhered to aquatic wildlife, livestock, vehicles,
    and people

32
  • Competitive ability of Loosestrife in non-native
    habitats
  • Compared biomass of Purple Loosestrife in native
    and non-native habitats
  • Purple Loosestrife biomass was greater in
    non-native habitat
  • Can reallocate biomass usually used for defense
    to reproduction and growth

33
Effects of Purple Loosestrife on The Food Web and
Bird Nesting Success
  • Limits prey abundance
  • 120 insects species in Europe
  • 12 insect species in Manitoba, Canada
  • Elevated predation rates of nestlings
  • Change in the plant community render nests more
    susceptible to predation
  • Redwing Blackbirds 6 less breeding success when
    nesting in Loosestrife vs cattails
  • Nest later in Loosestrife vs cattails
  • Marsh wrens never nested in Loosestrife

34
Generalized Superexploitation
  • Exploitation of food web, consumption of the
    primary producers, the lower end of the food web
  • Superexploitation leads to extinction of species
    or groups of species
  • Example Zebra mussels

35
Zebra Mussels
  • Native to Caspian and Black Seas (Eurasia)
  • Entered Great Lakes in 1988
  • Female lays 1 million eggs
  • Juveniles (veligers) can disperse great distances
    by currents and boats
  • Colonies of adults attain population densities of
    700,000 ind/meter

36
Zebra Mussels
  • Ecological impacts
  • Consume large amounts of phytoplankton
  • Attach to native mussels impeding their movement,
    feeding, and respiration

37
Food Chain in a Fresh Water Lake
38
Sea lamprey
Pacific Salmon
Lake trout
Smelt
Minnows
Alewife, smelt, ruffle, gobies
Zebra mussel
Zooplankton Spiny water flea
Phytoplankton
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