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Plant Ecology

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Definition: study of the distribution and abundance of plants and the factors ... Definition of species (A) Typological species-defined through reference to a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant Ecology


1
Plant Ecology
  • Definition study of the distribution and
    abundance of plants and the factors (biotic and
    environmental) that controls this.
  • Individual
  • Population
  • Community
  • Ecosystem

2
Why study plant ecology?
3
Why is plant ecology different from animal ecology
Plants are sessile
4
Consequence of being sessile
Cant escape predators Toxins, spines, grasses
hide meristems
5
Consequence of being sessile
  • Cant migrate in bad weather
  • Leaf deciduousness, seed dormancy, overwinter
    below ground

6
Consequence of being sessile
  • Need special adaptations to move seeds and pollen
  • Seeds have wings, parachutes, or berries
    dispersed by animals
  • Pollen-wind dispersed or animal dispersed

7
Consequence of being sessile
  • Interact primarily with neighbors
  • Compete for resources locally, therefore, concept
    of density may not be appropriate
  • Matings take place between neighbors

8
Consequence of being sessile
  • Spatial structure of populations is very
    important
  • Affects competitive relationships, and
    mutualistic relationships
  • Affects the genetic structure of the population

9
Why is plant ecology different than animal ecology
  • Plants exhibit indeterminate growth
  • All plants grow from meristems,
  • the position of the meristem determines the
    morphology of the plant
  • E.g. Strawberry,grass tillers

10
Definitions
  • Meristem- the growing point of the plant
  • A region in which undifferentiated cells divide
  • Genet- refers to genetically distinct
    individuals, (i.e. all of the parts arise from
    the same seed)
  • Ramet-a part of the genet, (i.e., one tiller of a
    grass)

11
Why is plant ecology different than animal ecology
  • Plants exhibit plastic growth
  • Examplesplants growing in dry conditions may
    allocate more biomass to roots than shoots
    plants growing in wet conditions produce more
    arenchyma cells

12
Why?
  • This flexible growth arises from their modular
    construction
  • Phenotypic plasticity- plants can change their
    growth form in response to environmental
    conditions

13
How are plants similar to animals
  • Plants exhibit behavior

14
How are plants similar to animals
  • Plants exhibit behavior
  • Movement in response to some kind of change in
    the plants environment
  • E.g. sensitive plant Mimosa pudica
  • Tropical liana or vine, Ipomea phillomega grows
    towards gaps
  • Response to light determined by phytochrome

15
Individuals
  • Why study individuals?
  • Individuals exhibit different physiological
    tolerances
  • Determine plant distribution in the environment

16
Individuals
  • Why study individuals?
  • Individuals have different competitive abilities
  • Determine plant distribution in the environment

17
Individuals
  • Why study individuals?
  • Individuals have different genetic composition,
    which determines their ability of their offspring
    to tolerate different environmental conditions
  • Determine plant distribution in the environment

18
Individuals
  • Variation among individuals
  • Important
  • Population dynamics- community and ecosystems
  • Evolution
  • Change in the phenotypic characteristics of a
    population or species over time

19
Individual traits can determine where plants
occur in the environment
  • Physiological tolerances
  • Biotic interactions
  • Evolutionary constraints

20
Life History of a plant
21
Life History of a plant
  • Life History describes the typical
    characteristics of a species, particularly the
    characteristics related to reproduction
  • how long a plant lives, how long it takes to
    reach reproductive size, how often it reproduces
  • Examples annual, biennial, perennials
  • Extreme examples, Monocarpic plants, live many
    years, reproduce once and die
  • bamboo

22
Life History of a plant
  • how long a plant lives, how long it takes to
    reach reproductive size, how often it reproduces
  • Examples annual, biennial, perennials
  • Extreme examples, Monocarpic plants, live many
    years, reproduce once and die
  • Bamboo, yucca plants

23
Environmental Controls of species distributions
  • The law of the minimum- the factor in shortest
    supply will limit growth the most
  • Water, light, nutrients, micronutrients
  • Problems with this idea
  • Excess supply of a factor can be toxic
  • Factors may be substitutable

24
Environmental Controls of species distributions
  • Physiological Tolerance Model
  • The range of habitats for a given species is the
    sum of tolerance limits for each environmental
    factor.

Soil nitrogen
Soil pH
Light intensity
Frost free
Potential habitat
25
Environmental Controls of species distributions
  • Problems with this model
  • Assumes that environmental factors limit plant
    distribution and ignores biotic factors such as
    competition
  • Physiological tolerances may change when plants
    are grown together and are competing

26
Relative growth
pH
pH
Pure culture
Mixed culture
Physiological tolerance can shift when plants are
grown in competition
27
Environmental Controls of species distributions
  • Physiological range-potential range of a species
  • Physiological optimum-optimal conditions for a
    species
  • Ecological range- observed range when grown under
    natural conditions
  • Ecological optimum-observed optimum when grown
    under natural conditions

28
What is a species?
  • Definition of species
  • (A) Typological species-defined through reference
    to a type specimen
  • (B) Morphological species-defined through shared
    traits
  • Flower structure,leaf shape, chromosome number,
    biochemical pathways, similarity of DNA sequences
  • (C) Biological species-members of a group of
    populations that interbreed or potentially
    interbreed with each other and produce viable
    offspring
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