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Ecology???

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Title: Ecology???


1
Ecology???
  • 2003
  • LS4143
  • ???(2765)

URL www.prenhall.com/stiling.hinet.net
2
????(Course Description)

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3
Textbook
  • Ecology(Fourth Edition), by P. Stiling, 2002
  • Published by Prentice Hall

4
????
  • ????
  • ???0.3???0.5???0.2

5
??????????
  • ?? ?? ????
  • 1 Introduction 1
  • 2 Genetics and ecology 2
  • 3 Extinction 3
  • 4 Group selection and individual selection 4
  • 5 Life history strategies 5
  • 6 Population growth, physical environment 6,7
  • 7 Competition and coexistence, Mutualism 8,9
  • 8 Predation, herbivory 10,11
  • 9 Parasitism, controls on population size 12,13
  • 10 ??? 1-13
  • 11 ??
  • 12 Community ecology 14,15
  • 13 Species diversity and stability 16,17
  • 14 Succession and island biogeography 18,19
  • 15 Trophic structure 20
  • 16 Energy flow 21
  • 17 Nutrients 22
  • 18 ??? 14-22

6
Road Map
Chapter 1 Why and How to Study EcologyChapter
Outline
  • Ecology is the study of that which limits the
    abundance of plants and animals. We can study
    ecology at the level of individual behavior,
    populations, communities, or ecosystems.
  • Observing natural systems affords an insight into
    their workings, but field and laboratory
    experiments provide the most rigorous tests of
    ecological ideas.
  • Ecological measurement must be made at the
    spatial and temporal scale appropriate to the
    question being asked.

7
Case study-1
8
Case study-2
9
Lecture outline
10
Outline
  1. Basic definitions of terms and field of study
  2. Understanding the difference between
    observational studies, and field and laboratory
    experiments
  3. Spatial and temporal implications in ecological
    interpretations

11
What Is Ecology?
  1. Study of individuals, populations, communities,
    and ecosystems
  2. Study of interactions among and between
    organisms, and their environment
  3. Importance to human activities

12
Example Aswan High Dam (Figure 1.1)
  • Located on the Nile River in Egypt (Figure 1.2)
  • Potential benefits
  • Several years of irrigation reserves
  • Add 526,000 ha in arable land
  • Produce 10 billion kilowatts of electrical power
    annually
  • Protect country from catastrophic flood
  • Benefits to date
  • Saved rice and cotton crops from drought damage
    in 1972 and 1973
  • Two to three crops annually, as opposed to one
  • Increased productivity and annual income from
    agriculture by 200
  • 380,000 ha of desert are being irrigated for the
    first time
  • Unexpected ecological problems
  • Increase in the incidence of schistosomiasis
    (4780)
  • Decreased phytoplankton blooms and fish harvests
    in the Mediterranean (e.g., Sardine annual catch
    decreased from 15,000 tons to 500)
  • Increased need for fertilization (100 million
    annually). Fertilizer production uses most of the
    energy generated by the Dam.
  • Farmers overwater their land, resulting in salt
    deposition (half of the irrigated acreage is
    affected by salt)
  • Proper ecological studies could have predicted
    resulting ecological problems of the dam

13
Ecologistsbest-equipped scientists to study
natural ecosystems
  • Investigating environmental change on the local,
    regional, and global scale
  • Reductionist analyses and experimentation
  • Adapted concepts from agriculture, physiology,
    biochemistry, genetics, chemistry, and
    mathematics
  • Analytical and portable equipment
  • Challenges for ecologists
  • Acid deposition
  • Global climate change
  • Increasing use of fertilizer results in huge N
    inputs to communities
  • Increasing use of pesticides
  • Species extinction
  • Ecology and Environmental Sciences
  • Four broad areas of ecology (Figure 1.3)

14
Behavioral Ecology
  • How behavior contributes to survivorship,
    reproduction, and population growth
  • Example Forest tent caterpillars (Malacosoma
    Figure 1.4)
  • Reside in silken tents and defoliate trees
  • Vulnerable to predators
  • Group living would appear to be counterproductive
    (i.e., assisting predators)
  • Benefits of group living
  • Multiple-layered large silken tents
  • Multiple and stronger silk trails to food sources
  • Pheromones to attract colony mates
  • Increased probability of propagating ones own
    genes

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Summary
  1. Importance of ecology in addressing human
    perturbations
  2. Four broad areas of ecology behavioral ecology,
    population ecology, community ecology, and
    ecosystems ecology
  3. Understanding ecological processes through the
    use of different ecological methods laboratory,
    field and natural experiments, and modeling
  4. Investigations must be conducted at the right
    spatial scale

18
Discussion Questions
  • What is the difference between ecology and
    environmental science?
  • What are ecological methods? How do we apply them
    to ecological questions?
  • In a local park, forest, or even in your backyard
    think about five ecological questions you could
    ask and the information you would need to answer
    them. Do your questions relate to behavioral,
    population, community, or ecosystems ecology or
    do they cross categories?

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Fundamental knowledge of Ecology
  • Biochemistry
  • Molecular biology
  • Genetics
  • Evolution
  • Physiology
  • Developmental biology
  • Cell biology

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The scope of ecology
  1. Ecology and levels of biological organization
  2. Subdisciplines in ecology
  3. Sciences allied to ecology

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The conceptual framework for ecological research
  • The scientific method
  • Reductionism versus holism
  • The limitations of experimental manipulation
  • Making inferences in ecological research
  • Statistical analyses and mathematical modeling
  • Proximate and ultimate explanations

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Ecology ???
  • Oekologie(E. Haeckel, 1869)
  •  
  • Oikos(G) House ??,???
  •  
  • Logos(G) study ??,??
  •  
  • The branch of science dealing with the
    relationships of living things to one another and
    to their environment.
  •  

27
Ecology
  • Functional ecology
  • How populations are maintained at a particular
    size and touches on behavior competition,
    predation.....?
  •  
  • Historical ecology
  • How populations have come to be this way and
    places great emphrasis on biogeography which
    presupposes knowledge of continental draft and of
    evolution.

28
ecologist????
  • ?? ???
  • ?? ????
  • ?????

29
?????????
  • ??????-??????
  • ??????-???????
  • .????????
  •  ????????
  • ????????????-????? (??) Community Ecology

30
?????????
  • 1735 Reaumur ???????(??)???????(?????)???????
  • 1766 J. G. Koelreuter 1775 C. K. Sprengel
  • ???????????????
  • 1749 G. L. L. de Buffon ????????????
  • 1805 A. von Humboldt ?????????????????????????

31
??????
  • 1798. T. Malthus(???)- Essay on population
    populations capacity geometric growth food supply
    increased arithmetically.
  • . Malthusian theory of population
  • . ???????
  • e.g. Oyster 8x107 eggs/yr.
  • Birds 275x108 ind/10yrs.
  •  
  • . Limiting reproduction
  • ?????????????????
  •  
  • ?Struggle for existence
  • . Variation between individuals.
  • ?????????
  • ? Natural selection

32
Limiting reproduction
  • ?????????????????
  • ?Struggle for existence
  • . Variation between individuals.
  • ?????????
  • ? Natural selection

33
Natural selection
  • 1809 J. B. Lamarck- Philosophie zoologique
  • . Use and disuse, Inheritance of acquired traits.
  • . giraffes,? use? longneck
  • . cave animal?disuse?blind eyes.
  • . Reductive or vestigial structure
  • 1838 P. F. Verhulst ?????Logistic ???
  • 1840 Leibig ????????
  •  1844 Gasparin ???????????

34
Species origin(????)
  • 1859 C. Darwin
  • . The origin of species by means of Natural
    selection or preservation of favored races in the
    struggle for life.

35
??????
  • C. Lyell- Principles of Geology
  • . Physical world changed gradually
  • A. R. Wallace(1822-1913)- Nature selection,
    Island Life, Geographical Distribution of
    Animals.
  •  . All organisms are descended with modification
    from common ancestors.
  • . The mechanism for evolution was natural
    selection.
  • 1895 E. Warming ???????(?????)
  •  1898 A. F. W. Schimper ?????(???????)
  •  1913 Journal of ecology (UK)

36
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  • 1.      ????????????????????????????????????(????
    ???????)
  • 2.      ????????(?????)?????????,????????????????
    ???????????????????
  • 3.      ?????(??????)?????????
  • 4.      ?????????,????,????,?????
  • 5. ?????????????????,???????,?????

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